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Wisconsin Protesters Say Next Fight At The Polls

March 13, 2011

MADISON, Wis. — Clogging the Wisconsin Capitol grounds and screaming angry chants, tens of thousands of undaunted pro-labor protesters descended on Madison again Saturday and vowed to focus on future elections now that contentious cuts to public worker union rights have become law. Protests have rocked the Capitol almost every day since Gov. Scott Walker proposed taking nearly all collective bargaining rights away from public workers, but the largest came a day after the governor signed the measure into law. Madison Police estimated the crowd at 85,000 to 100,000 people – along with 50 tractors and one donkey – by late afternoon. No one was arrested. Speakers delivered angry diatribes while the crowd carried signs comparing Walker to dictators and yelled thunderous chants of “this is what democracy looks like.” “This is so not the end,” said protester Judy Gump, a 45-year-old English teacher at Madison Memorial High School. “This is what makes people more determined and makes them dig in.” Walker’s signature on the measure capped a week of political maneuvering to end a bitter, month-long standoff that began when the state’s 14 Democratic senators fled to Illinois in an ultimately futile attempt to block the legislation. Throngs of protesters gathered Saturday outside a convention center where senators made their first public appearances in Madison since ending their self-imposed exile. Demonstrators treated the lawmakers like rock stars, yelling “Fab 14, our heroes!” and giddily snapping pictures. All 14 Democrats later marched around the Capitol, trading chants of “thank you” with protesters who ringed the sidewalks. When the senators made their way to a stage, they promised to shift their energies toward recall drives already under way against eight of their GOP colleagues. “Now … we trade in our rally signs for clipboards and we take to the streets to recall the Republicans,” Sen. Chris Larson of Milwaukee told the cheering crowd, “and in one year we recall the governor that refuses to listen.” Walker is not eligible to be recalled until he completes his first year in office in January 2012. Eight of the Democrats also face recall efforts. Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald issued a statement Saturday calling them the most shameful 14 people in the state. “(Fleeing to Illinois) is an absolute insult to the hundreds of thousands of Wisconsinites who are struggling to find a job, much less one they can run away from and go down to Illinois – with pay,” Fitzgerald said. Walker’s plan has spurred a national debate over labor rights. Its passage is a key victory for Republicans who have targeted unions in efforts to cut government spending across the country. Democrats see it as a blatant attempt to weaken organized labor, one of their strongest campaign allies. Labor leaders have promised to use the setback to fire up members and mount a major counterattack against Republicans at the ballot box in 2012. “We’re never going to give up,” said Marilyn Rolfsmeyer, 56, who serves as the 300-student Argyle School District’s only art teacher. “What part of it don’t they understand? There’s hope here. I feel it. You feel the energy, the intensity. Somebody’s got to be out there feeling it, too.” Dozens of fist-pumping farmers drew cheers as they chugged around the Capitol square in tractors bearing signs with messages such as “planting the seeds for a big season of recalls.” Tod Pulvermacher, 33, of Bear Valley, towed a manure spreader carrying a sign that read, “Walker’s bill belongs here.” “Farmers are working-class Americans,” he said as the crowd cheered. “We work for a living as hard as anybody, and this is about all of us.” Walker has repeatedly argued that ending collective bargaining gives local governments much-needed flexibility to confront cuts in state aid necessary to fix Wisconsin’s deficit, which is expected to grow to $3.6 billion deficit over two years. The new law erases public workers’ ability to collectively bargain anything except wages up to the rate of inflation. It also requires them to contribute more to their pensions and health care, changes that amount to an 8 percent pay cut. Police and firefighters are exempt. The Senate Democrats had fled to deny Republicans, who hold a 19-14 Senate majority, the 20-member quorum needed to vote on measures that spend money. But GOP leaders worked around them Wednesday, calling a special committee to take spending items out of Walker’s proposal. The Senate passed it 18-1 minutes later. Assembly Republicans approved it the next day. Democratic Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk has filed a lawsuit seeking to block the secretary of state from publishing the law, the last step before it takes effect. She argues the bill still contained fiscal items and that the committee meeting violated Wisconsin’s open meeting law. ___ Associated Press writer Dinesh Ramde contributed to this report.

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Mary Bottari: WI Firefighters Spark "Move Your Money" Moment

March 12, 2011

On the day that the bill passed the Wisconsin Assembly effectively ending 50 years of collective bargaining in Wisconsin and eviscerating the ability of public unions to raise money through dues, a new front opened in the battle for the future of Wisconsin families. Bagpipes blaring, hundreds of firefighters walked across the street from the Wisconsin Capitol building, stood outside the Marshall and Ilsley Bank (M&I Bank) and played a few tunes — loudly. Later, a group of firefighter and consumers stopped back in at the bank to make a few transactions. One by one they closed their accounts and withdrew their life savings, totaling approximately $190,000. After the last customer left, the bank quickly closed its doors, just in case the spontaneous “Move Your Money” moment caught fire. The sedate, old fashioned M&I Bank on the Capitol Square has gained some notoriety in recent weeks. Oddly, a tunnel in the M&I parking garage links to the capitol basement. Dubbed the “rat hole to the Walker palace” , the tunnel was used by Governor Scott Walker to ferry lobbyists into the capitol building to hear his budget address during a time when the capitol was in a virtual lock down in defiance of a court order and after Sheriffs has quit the building refusing to be a “palace guard.” Now the bank is getting caught up in the controversy again. Word is beginning to spread that M&I is one of Walker’s biggest backers. Top executives at M&I Bank have long been boosters of Walker. M&I Chief Executive Dennis Kuester and his wife gave $20,000 to Walker in recent years. When you package individual and PAC contributions by employers, M&I is number one — at $57,000 dollars. The firm apparently uses a conduit to bundle much of its money to Walker. Flyers, webpages, and Facebook sites have popped up encouraging WI consumers to boycott Walker campaign contributors and “Pull the Plug on M&I Bank.” Other banks whose employees have donated large sums to Walker, such as Associated Bank and North Shore Bank may also be seeing their customers soon. Economic Transparency Joe Conway, President Madison Fire Fighters Local 311, explained to CMD that the action was totally spontaneous, but that “economic transparency” was going to be a big theme in the fight ahead. “Groups will be sending letters to Walker’s major donors giving them the opportunity to support the teachers, firefighters and police in their community.” Conway is well aware that new polling shows that 74% of Wisconsin families support collective bargaining rights for public workers. Two of these letters are already in the mail to M&I Bank and Kwik Trip. “The undersigned groups would like your company to publicly oppose Governor Walker’s efforts to virtually eliminate collective bargaining for public employees in Wisconsin. In the event that you cannot support this effort to save collective bargaining, please be advised that the undersigned will publicly and formally boycott the goods and services provided by your company,” the letter says. “However, if you join us, we will do everything in our power to publicly celebrate your partnership in the fight to preserve the right of public employees to be heard at the bargaining table.” The letters are signed by the heads of the Wisconsin Professional Police Association, the Professional Fire Fighters of Wisconsin, the International Association of Fire Fighters Local 311, Madison Teachers Inc., Dane County Deputy Sheriffs Association and the Madison Professional Police Officers Association. Just the Beginning Walker’s list of campaign contributors is already in wide circulation on websites like “Scott Walker Watch” and fast-growing Facebook pages like “Boycott Scott Walkers Contributors” . These grassroots efforts are backed up by solid names and numbers extracted from the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign (WDC) database, a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization that tracks money in politics. The WDC data shows that Walker’s major contributors include a diversity of national and state-based firms including Koch Brother Industries, AT&T, Walmart, John Deere Tractor, Johnsonville Brats, Miller/Coors, Kwik Trip, Sargento Cheese, and SC Johnson & Sons (producers of Windex, Glade, Pledge etc). The letter writing effort is being undertaken not to put people out of work, but to encourage workers to let their bosses know it is time to reconsider their support for Walker’s newly revealed radical agenda. Sam Hokin, a Wisconsinite and small businessman who started the Facebook page in the early days of the protest, put the strategy bluntly: “The only thing the Republicans care about is money. The only way you can touch them is through their revenue. They don’t care about signs and protesters. They don’t care about the opinion of the majority of the people in the state, their bottom line is money.” Unions, pension funds, cities and counties and average consumers bank at these banks and support these firms by buying their products and services. They have tremendous clout in Wisconsin’s small economy. Greatest Heist in History Wisconsin workers are keenly aware that they are part of a historic push back that is spreading from state to state. After $14 trillion dollars of housing wealth, wages and retirement savings were taken from the middle class during the 2008 financial collapse, workers are being asked to take it on the chin again. Michael Moore put it best: “We aren’t broke. Wisconsin is not broke. The country is awash in wealth and cash. It’s just that it’s not in your hands. It has been transferred, in the greatest heist in history, from the workers and consumers to the banks and the portfolios of the über-rich.” M&I Bank is in the process of being bought by a Canadian bank. It took $2 billion in TARP bailout money from the taxpayers and have yet to pay it back. “They [state Republicans] came in like the Grim Reaper to drive a knife into the heart of labor,” yelled Jim Garity at a recent rally. Garity is a unionized Jefferson County Highway Department worker and leader. “But we are going to stand and we are not going to bleed. Governor Walker’s plan is to give more money to Wall Street, but we are going to take back our money from Wall Street and put Main Street to work!” Walker’s recent moves include over $200 billion in tax cuts for corporations while stripping $1 trillion from Wisconsin schools and local governments. The “take it back” movement is gaining steam. At the federal level, AFL-CIO, SEIU are joined by consumer groups in a fight to apply a small financial transaction tax to damaging Wall Street speculation in order to recoup over $100 billion dollars a year for job creation and other essential needs. It’s About Power Walker’s collective bargaining bill not only seeks to gut a 50 year tradition in the state where public unions started, but by doing away with automatic check off for union dues he seeks to cripple the the ability of public sector unions to hire employees to organize, grow and be a force in Wisconsin politics. State Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald, one of Walker’s closest allies in the legislature, admitted as much to FOX News. “If we win this battle, and the money is not there under the auspices of the unions, certainly what you’re going to find is President Obama is going to have a much difficult, much more difficult time getting elected and winning the state of Wisconsin,” said Fitzgerald. While some hold out hope for a general strike and vigorous recall efforts are underway, others remain focused on leveraging the power of the “sleeping giant” to force Walker to back down and to prevent devastating cuts to schools and municipalities. Stay tuned. This fire might be hard to contain. The Madison-based Center for Media and Democracy has been reporting live from the Wisconsin Capitol for four weeks. Learn more at our website PRWatch.org .

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Wisconsin Protesters Removed From State Capitol By Police

March 10, 2011

MADISON, Wis. — Police carried dozens of protesters from a hallway leading to the Wisconsin Assembly on Thursday as Democratic representatives pounded on the locked door of the chamber, demanding to be let in to the room where a vote was scheduled on an explosive bill that would take away public workers’ collective bargaining rights. (SCROLL DOWN FOR LIVE UPDATES) At least 100 protesters packed the hallway, pounding drums, while the Democratic representatives gathered in front of the doors, which were opened just before 11:30 a.m. At least 50 protesters were carried out by police, and the building was locked down briefly while officers did a security review. Rallies against the bill have attracted thousands of protesters to the Capitol over the past several weeks. A vote on it had been held up after 14 Democratic senators fled to Illinois three weeks ago, leaving that chamber one short of the 20 members needed to take up any measures that spend money. Republicans got around that Wednesday by using an unexpected but simple procedural move to remove all spending measures from Gov. Scott Walker’s collective bargaining legislation and voting to approve it without Democrats present. About 200 people spent the night in the Capitol in protest over the Senate’s swift and unexpected passage of the bill. With the Assembly’s vote scheduled for 11 a.m., dozens of Democratic representatives showed up to find the doors to the chamber locked. “What more egregious, illegal, unethical step can be taken to prevent democracy in Wisconsin?” asked Rep. Donna Seidel, D-Wausau, as she pounded on the door along with her colleagues. With the Assembly empty, it was not clear where Republican lawmakers were. They showed up and began to file in after the doors were opened. Protesters packed the Assembly gallery, sitting quietly as lawmakers prepared to vote. In other parts of the building, they called out and shouted as television cameras recorded the scene. Police began clearing protesters out about an hour before the scheduled vote. Danny Spitzberg, 26, a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said officers gave protesters little explanation for why they needed to leave. He walked out on his own after being ordered to leave, but others were dragged through the hall. “This is grossly undemocratic, it stinks up the whole process,” Spitzberg said. At a news conference at the Wisconsin State Fair grounds in suburban Milwaukee, Gov. Scott Walker said he was traveling and hadn’t been to the Capitol on Thursday, but he was concerned about problems he had been told were being caused by a handful of protesters. He did not specify what those problems were. Walker said the judge who has been deciding access to the building also was being apprised of developments, and he asked the protesters to remain peaceful. “People can have a civil, passionate debate about this. One doesn’t have to offset the other,” Walker said. “It is my hope and my request to the people of the state is that they comply. My worry is frankly people coming in from other states who aren’t as interested in complying with the civility we’ve shown here in the state, not only lately but throughout out state’s history.” About 15 protesters stood outside the fairground’s gates chanting “Recall Walker” during the news conference. They held signs, including: “United We Stand.”

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Liberal Tea Party? U.S. Uncut Disrupts Service At Bank Of America

February 27, 2011

Demonstrators posing as a liberal Tea Party disrupted service at banks across the country on Saturday, in an effort to spotlight the gimmicks multi-billion dollar corporations use to avoid paying their fair share in taxes. Self-organized through anti-austerity movement U.S. Uncut , regional captains helped organize demonstrators at more than 40 different branches of Bank of America. The newly-minted group was inspired by an article published recently in The Nation by Johann Hari: ” How to Build a Progressive Tea Party .” Hari writes: Imagine a parallel universe where the Great Crash of 2008 was followed by a Tea Party of a very different kind … Instead of the fake populism of the Tea Party, there is a movement based on real populism. It shows that there is an alternative to making the poor and the middle class pay for a crisis caused by the rich. It shifts the national conversation … This may sound like a fantasy–but it has all happened. The name of this parallel universe is Britain. As recently as this past fall, people here were asking the same questions liberal Americans have been glumly contemplating: Why is everyone being so passive? Why are we letting ourselves be ripped off? Why are people staying in their homes watching their flat-screens while our politicians strip away services so they can fatten the superrich even more? Hari evokes the spirit of UK Uncut — a movement made up of British citizens, who, in the face of brutal budget cuts, have sought to shame corporate tax dodgers through public demonstrations — and suggests Americans follow suit. U.S. Uncut is doing just that; Saturday marked the group’s first coordinated event. “Billionaires got bonuses, bailouts and tax cuts, too — the least they can do is pay their fair share of taxes,” said Ryan Clay, a 28-year-old media analyst who helped organize the U.S. Uncut demonstration in Washington, DC. “I got inspired, other people got inspired, we met online, and we’re working through social media to really bring these abhorrent facts to the public.” A rally in San Francisco drew scores of protesters to a branch of Bank of America at Union Square; dressed in ordinary street clothes, they filed into the bank one by one, getting in line to speak with the tellers. Each of them carried a fake check from Bank of America made out to “The United States c/o Tax Paying Citizens,” for $1.5 billion. The sum would cover all the bank’s unpaid taxes on its 2009 earned income of $4.4 billion, demonstrators said. Only a few people had presented their fake checks to the tellers before the bank temporarily closed for business; protesters were peacefully escorted out of the building by the police. Once on the street, however, they stayed put and kept handing out fake checks, which had facts about corporate tax avoidance written in fine print on the back, as fliers. “Two-thirds of all U.S. corporations do not pay federal income tax,” the fliers said. “BofA is the largest bank and the 5th largest corporation in America.” “I think our fliers did better than political fliers usually do,” said Leslie Dreyer, 32, a resident of Oakland, Calif., who came up with the idea of using checks as props. “People were like, ‘Oh, a check!’” A Bank of America spokeswoman did not immediately return a request for comment. Many of the largest corporations in the country have mastered the art of evading taxes, booking expenses in the U.S. and profits in low-tax countries. A list compiled by Forbes shows that Bank of America was far from being the only multi-billion dollar corporation to avoid paying taxes on billions of dollars in earnings in 2009; it is also not the only bank to spark angry demonstrations this week. On Wednesday morning, New York City Councilman Jumaane Williams marched into a Park Avenue Chase bank to denounce the bank’s failure to help homeowners avoid foreclosure. HuffPost’s Laura Basset reports : After denouncing the bank to a cheering crowd and calling its executives “bloodsuckers” for accepting bailout money and refusing to help the suffering homeowners they “preyed on,” Williams was stopped by security guards at the door and told the branch was closed. The mob then chanted “open the door” until Williams was let in, at which point he closed his account. Williams told HuffPost that when campaigning in New York City, he met at least two people on every block with mortgage troubles. He said he doesn’t want the bank to use his money to “further deteriorate the community” he represents, especially in light of chief executive Jamie Dimon’s recent $17 million bonus. “It’s incredible what these banks are making people go through,” he said. “It’s disgusting. They’re like bloodsuckers, just sucking the lifeblood out of communities and refusing to help out. I understand that people need to get paid to get the best and brightest and these bonuses help with that, but you can’t do that and then not assist the community and then get a taxpayer bailout to the tune of billions of dollars. That’s just greed at its worst.” To help readers navigating an underwater mortgage, HuffPost has scheduled a meetup where homeowners can get together and talk about their mortgage-related troubles. The next meetup is slated for the second Tuesday in March, and each subsequent meeting will also be held on the second Tuesday of the month; locate your local meetup chapter here . If you’re interested in organizing a meetup and need help doing it, email us at lucia@huffingtonpost.com, arthur@huffingtonpost.com or ryan@huffingtonpost.com. If you’re a real estate professional or attorney with experience in short sales and foreclosures who can help with the meetups, contact us or find your local chapter.

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‘We Couldn’t Cut Enough’: Newark Mayor Cory Booker

February 3, 2011

Since he became mayor of Newark in 2006, Cory Booker has had to make cuts that previously seemed unthinkable. Under his watch, the city closed libraries , imposed furloughs on employees and, late last year, laid off about 13 percent of its police force. While the police department says there are no fewer officers on patrol — thanks to reassignments within the force — a spike in crime in the two months since the layoffs has left some residents worried about safety. Newark isn’t alone. After the worst financial crisis since the Depression, cities across the nation have seen revenue wither . As they struggle to get their books in order, cities are increasingly finding that they don’t have the money to fund even the most basic of services. But while Booker faces a common problem, his strategies for dealing with it are unusual. He spoke with HuffPost about how he navigates the budgeting process, and why he has hope for the city of Newark. HuffPost: A trailer for the new season of Brick City starts with a quote from you, on the screen, where you say, “Squeeze everything else but police and fire.” But late last year, the city laid off 164 officers, about 13 percent of the force. How did it come to that? Booker: Look, budgets across the country — 60 percent of American cities have had reductions in their forces of public safety. And, so, this is not something that’s unique to Newark. In fact, right now it’s plaguing major cities in New Jersey. Camden has had major layoffs. Paterson is facing layoffs. Atlantic City. Jersey City. We’re facing, literally, the worst economy of our lifetimes. So, we have dramatic losses in revenue. And public safety, frankly — police and fire — make up the significant majority of our budget. We were squeezing and starving every other area of our city. Furloughing employees, cutting staff. But it came to a point where we couldn’t cut enough to make up for the tremendous budgetary shortfall. Challenges demand creativity. I’m grateful that the police director and my team really came forward with a substantive plan to make sure that the loss of those police officers didn’t affect the progress we were making in the street. And, look, it’s been a difficult adjustment. We had really some challenges in the month of December. But now, as we’re going through January, things are really getting back on track. And I’m really encouraged. Remember, the first three years in office, we led the nation in percentage reduction of shootings and murders. And I’m really confident that now we’re beginning to get back to that nation-leading pace. HP: I’ve heard that there are the same number of officers patrolling the street. But I also have heard from some of the union officials that in order to accomplish that, older officers have had to be re-deployed: People who were looking at retirement are now on street patrol. Are you concerned about officer safety? CB: I’m always concerned about officer safety. I think when you are the leader of men and women who put their lives on the line — whether it’s firefighters and police, or national guard members in the military — that’s the most horrific thing, I think, for an executive, when guys who put their lives on the line get hurt or injured. That’s a concern that hasn’t changed as a result of the layoffs. But in many ways, we have more experienced officers on the streets. Guys with more years under their belts, not people that are six months out of the academy. It’s a give-and-take in many ways. Look, I’m very happy: We have our chief, who used to be doing other jobs, now in precincts, running our precincts. In many ways, we have the best talent of the agency closer to the street and closer to the ground on a daily basis. HP: The city has also laid off other workers. How deep can the city cut before it just stops to function? CB: Money is a necessary but not sufficient resource with which to get the job done. And I found out when I first came in — we were dialing down our budgets every year that I’ve been in office. What I’ve been finding is, if you are more creative, if you bring more resources to the table from outside your taxpayer base — you know, we’ve raised well over $200 million in private philanthropy for our strategic needs here in the city of Newark — it’s if you bring people together to volunteer, and do things that they weren’t doing before, you can still make tremendous progress. A lot of our best innovations since I’ve been mayor have been public-private partnerships. Whether it’s our ex-offender reentry programs, or even the camera system that we put up all around the city — all paid for by philanthropy — Newark is creating a real good model for government effectiveness and advancement, based on its partnership with non-profits and the private sector. HP: Does that include your own involvement in citizens’ lives? Especially via your Twitter feed? CB: Today’s a great day. We got out early this morning. I’ve been myself inspecting streets, but I’ve got now thousands of more eyes on my streets, and people tweeting me about what’s wrong. In the last month alone, my Twitter feed has helped me get water main breaks addressed before I even knew they existed — to even traffic lights, to even bigger things, like people that are in need of emergency services but can’t get through. Government in the 21st century in America is going to change dramatically. We’ve seen government obligations mushrooming, like pension costs and health care costs. It’s gonna squeeze out a lot of the other things that we expect from government, unless we get more creative and change the way government does business. This is what Newark is trying to do. Under tough circumstances, in the worst economy of a lifetime, we’re actually making strides in areas, from affordable housing, to re-entry services, to grassroots financial empowerment and literacy, to public safety efforts. We’re able to make some strides, even though this is such a tough time, because we’re thinking creatively. We’re bringing in new partnerships, we’re introducing technology. It’s not easy — we’re stumbling and falling, and we’re occasionally being set back. But all in all, if you look at Newark compared to five years ago, our shootings are dramatically down, murders are dramatically down, our population is dramatically up. There’s a lot of hope in Newark. The arena, and the arts culture in Newark, is booming. There’s more basketball games — college and professional — played in Newark right now than any place in America, except for the Staples Center and Madison Square Garden. So much is happening in Newark right now that’s making me downright proud. But every day, every inch of ground you’ve got to earn. It’s tough, it’s hard, but I’ve got great partners helping me in and outside of government. HP: How do you make these budget decisions? How do you determine whether to close libraries, or lay off workers? Or cut toilet paper from the city offices? CB: Well, the toilet paper never got cut. [Laughs.] It is tough decisions. I often joke that the decisions we had to make last year were between awful and godawful. But at the same time, that’s what you’re elected for. I would rather be in a game where you’re 20 points behind than 20 points ahead, because we can rally people together to do what other people don’t think we can do. If we’re willing to make the tough decisions, but at the same time be humble enough to reach out for help and engage others, we can make strides where other people can’t. If you walk around the city of Newark today, you will see at least two dozen new parks all over the city that were built during this worst economic downturn. That’s because we’re bringing people together to do things other people can’t do. Literally, the largest parks expansion our city has had in over a century has happened in the worst economy, because of all the partnerships that we’ve been bringing together. That’s how you have to get things done now. You have to find creative coalitions. We had a horrible spike in car-jackings in December. What we did was we brought together a state, Federal, local coalition, and we beat it back within weeks. It was amazing. The law enforcement community in New Jersey rallied together in a way that left me humbled and inspired.

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Bevis Longstreth: Obama’s Phoenix: The Council on Jobs and Competitiveness

January 22, 2011

President Obama today named GE Chairman Jeffrey Immelt to head the White House Council he has served on over the past two years under the leadership of former Fed Chairman Paul A. Volcker. This advisory body, originally named the Economic Recovery Advisory Board, lacked traction with the White House and, as a consequence, declined in political significance even as the stature of Mr. Volcker soared among those in the country who value sound and independent thinking over political calculation and sail-trimming. As author of the major element in the Financial Reform legislation enacted last year that would directly address, in part, the huge risks to our financial system caused by proprietary activities of large banks — the eponymously named “Volcker Rule” — Mr. Volcker might easily have been seen by Wall Street as a formidable foe. At the outset of President Obama’s term, the White House surely would have known him to be seen that way, for his record of putting national welfare ahead of private interest is a long and distinguished one. Somehow, in one of the most remarkable PR tricks in this writer’s memory, Republican leadership convinced the press, and through it, a large share of our nation’s citizens, that the President had been deliberately, and effectively, anti-business. Many business leaders joined in this libel, including Jeffrey Immelt, in a speech last summer in Rome. In fact, this claim is patently false. However, in the nation’s Capitol, where mirrors enlarge clever fallacies until they appear to be true, the President has chosen to respond by seeking to endear himself to business. To that end, he has undertaken a number ofsteps that carry him into an ever-tighter embrace of all to which the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, that lowest common denominator of the business community, aspires. And so, rising like a Phoenix, the defunct Economic Recovery Advisory Board is reconstituted with Big Business at its helm, new membership in support and a new name to capture the President’s emerging affection for job creation. It could work. It might work under Jeffrey Immelt’s leadership, although he is better known for creating jobs off-shore than onshore. Since 2005 GE has shed 27,000 jobs, shrinking from 161,000 to 134,000 in 2009. And, of course, Big Business is not the place that economists would naturally think of first as the most promising place to generate jobs. When Franklin D. Roosevelt entered the White House in 1933,there were some 18 million destitute Americans needing help. To address this problem, and the growing number of those out of work, he was quick to bring to Washington not a leader of big business but Harry Hopkins, a social worker whose mission in New York State had been to provide relief for the unemployed. The principal vehicle for addressing these problems was the Works Progress Administration, or WPA as it became known, an agency that under Hopkins’ leadership and FDR’s vigorous support, achieved lasting monuments to its success in meeting human suffering with the offer of work. It is hard to imagine a WPA II becoming a priority of Mr. Immelt’s Council, although that is precisely what, as a matter of first and highest priority, it should do. Alas, any examination of the history of our Government’s handling of the unemployment problem under President Herbert Hoover between the Great Crash and FDR’s inauguration, reveals parallels to what President Obama did today that are unnerving to the extent they predict how the phoenix-like Council on Jobs and Competitiveness will behave under the leadership of Big Business. In 1930, President Hoover appointed Colonel Arthur Woods to head a committee on unemployment known as the “President’s Emergency Committee for Employment.” Woods was a distinguished public servant, not of the size of Paul Volcker but formed from the same mold of personal integrity. He had served with distinction as Police Commissioner for New York City. His Committee functioned from October, 1930 to August 1931. During that time it investigated the plight of the unemployed and the degree to which states and municipalities could cope. It recommended Federal relief in a highly textured report to the President. Hoover spoke to Congress soon after receiving that report, on December 2, 1930, rejecting its findings and blaming foreigners for the depression. “The fundamental strength of the Nation’s economic life is unimpaired,” he announced. Economic conditions worsened. Unemployment grew. On August 19, 1931, President Hoover appointed Walter S. Gifford, President of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, to head a new advisory committee titled the “President’s Organization on Unemployment Relief”. At the time, ATT was of equal or greater stature than GE is today, and Mr. Gifford was a model representative of Big Business. Mr. Gifford proved as steadfast as President Hoover was to the principle that the problems of unemployment were to be solved, if at all, by states and municipalities. These men feared national responsibility more than they feared national unemployment. Only time will tell whether this past is the tragic prologue to our future.

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Video: Kelly Says NYC New Year’s Eve to Be `Happy, Peaceful’

December 31, 2010

Dec. 31 (Bloomberg) — New York City Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly and Richard Falkenrath, a principal at the Chertoff Group and a Bloomberg Television contributing editor, talk about safety measures taken for tonight’s New Year’s Eve celebrations across the city. They speak with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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David Isenberg: PD-62 and PSC

December 28, 2010

Ever hear of the JFC Civil-Military Fusion Center ? Yes, neither had I, until an acquaintance emailed me the other day about it. It is a shop set up under the Joint Forces Command which is headquartered at Norfolk, VA. Reportedly it does excellent unclassified work. Earlier this month it released its monthly Afghanistan report titled, ” The Private Security Companies (PSCs) Dilemma in Afghanistan .” The report examines the impact of Afghanistan Presidential Decree No. 62 and the disbandment of PSCs. As this is a topic that has been much in the news of late, even though the Afghan government has somewhat rolled back its previously issued ban, it is worth looking at. A point that should surprise no one is that private security contractors are still heavily needed in Afghanistan. Nevertheless, private companies carrying out development projects in Afghanistan are still heavily reliant on PSCs. ISAF forces and the US also make great use of PSCs. According to the US Department of State, the US Department of Defense (DoD) was responsible for hiring 16,733 private guards to support the military efforts on the ground during Fiscal Year 2010. Of course, that is not all the PSC. The Afghan government estimates that there are in fact around 40,000 armed security contractors active in Afghanistan. The background to PD 62 was that it was issued at a tense time for security in Afghanistan, as the Afghan National Police (ANP) still lacked the capacity to assume full responsibility for providing security in the country. The decision to disband private security firms was made one week after it was agreed that control over security in Afghanistan would be transferred to the Afghan authorities by 2014. PD 62 mandated that all current PSCs should leave the country within four months of the decree’s approval, which would have made the deadline December 17. But given that private companies doing reconstruction work did not trust the ANP and that just two months after the president’s decision, in October, firms had already begun to cancel assistance programs and aid Karzai softened his position on the ban. On October 27, Karzai issued a press release on the formation of a committee led by the Ministry of Interior along with participating representatives from the International Security Assistance Force and major international donors. The committee was mandated to develop a plan for the disbandment of PSCs responsible for guarding development projects. However, on December 6, Karzai had abandoned his plans “to scrap private security firms in the country by mid-December. But there are still challenges ahead. Despite the decision to allow PSCs to continue operating in Afghanistan, the Afghan government left important details regarding security companies in doubt. Under the modified policy, security firms working for development companies, NATO, foreign embassies and the United Nations would be allowed to work in Afghanistan until their contracts ended, but it was unclear what would happen after the expiration date. Other new developments include private guards being required to wear uniforms and not being allowed to stop vehicles or set up roadblocks. It also indicated that a new independent public security force would be created to replace the PSCs already shut down and secure the development projects under their responsibility. However, convoy security would continue to be provided by private security firms, but the Afghan police would accompany the convoys to ensure that security firm employees were not misbehaving. So currently we have a situation where many observers: agree that the disbandment of PSCs is necessary to institutionalize the Afghan security sector and to contribute to strengthening institutionalization within the Afghan government. Nevertheless, how PSCs will work from now on remains unclear and further discussions ought to take place.

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Video: Rome Police Defuse Package Bomb at Greek Embassy

December 27, 2010

Dec. 27 (Bloomberg) — Police defused a package bomb at the Greek embassy in Rome, four days after two people were injured when similar explosives blew up at two other diplomatic missions in the Italian capital. Bloomberg’s Lorenzo Totaro reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Woman Jumps To Her Death At Trump Place

December 20, 2010

A 27-year-old analyst for Citigroup and local philanthropist shocked friends and family as she jumped to her death from Trump Place on Saturday. Not much is known yet as to why Jessica Fashano would decide to take her own life. By all accounts she was not only a rising business star but also a deeply generous and charitable person. According to the New York Times , “she seemed to care more about others than about herself.” She spearheaded fund-raisers for the Acumen Fund, which makes small-business loans to people in developing countries. And just in the past month, friends said, she helped coordinate a fund-raiser at a West Village boutique for Harboring Hearts Housing, a charity that provides lodging at modest prices for cardiac patients. Fashano was seen on videotape entering a West Side apartment building she did not belong to, 16 blocks north of where she lived. In the elevator she asked a resident how to get to the roof, and at 8:13 a.m. police found her body in a nearby courtyard. Why exactly Fashano chose this building, and that she left no suicide note, are among the many questions surrounding her death. Although the police said she was undergoing treatment for depression, friends and associates said she was always in high spirits. “It’s like something just changed overnight,” said Ms. Javian, who said she spoke to Ms. Fashano daily and was supposed to have had brunch with her on Saturday morning. “Something just snapped, and we don’t know.” Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-273-8255 National Suicide Prevention Lifeline

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22 Arrested In Foreclousre Protest At Chase

December 16, 2010

LOS ANGELES — Police arrested 22 demonstrators who blocked entry to a downtown Chase bank branch Thursday to protest what they said were unfair home foreclosures. The demonstrators, which included homeowners facing foreclosure, community advocates and labor leaders, silently allowed officers to bind their wrists behind their backs with plastic restraints and guide them into a police van. Dozens more demonstrators chanted and marched on a nearby sidewalk holding sighs that said “Stop Bank Greed, Save Our Neighborhoods” as the 12 men and 10 women were taken into custody. Detective Gus Villanueva said there were no injuries to police or protesters, who would be cited for trespassing and released. Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment member David Mazariegos said the demonstrators hoped to bring attention to the plight of people who were unjustly losing their homes. He said banks’ failure to modify many borrowers’ loans puts them in violation of the Home Affordable Modification Program in which lenders agreed to participate as part of the bank bailout. “The banks are not helping anyone stay in their homes,” Mazariegos said. “It’s highway robbery, what they’re doing to these people.” ACCE director Amy Schur said the groups were singling out JPMorgan Chase & Co. because most of the borrowers whose foreclosures and evictions they are contesting are serviced by that bank. A Chase spokeswoman did not immediately return a phone call Thursday.

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Michael W. Hudson: My Talk With Michael Hudson, Part 2

November 12, 2010

Michael Hudson and Michael Hudson are often mistaken for each other. Along with sharing a name, they share an interest in the creative ways that some people help themselves to other people’s money. Michael Hudson the economist is the author of such books as Super Imperialism. Michael W. Hudson the reporter is a staff writer at the Center for Public Integrity and author of a new book , The Monster: How a Gang of Predatory Lenders and Wall Street Bankers Fleeced America, and Spawned a Global Crisis . This is Part 2 of an edited transcript of an email conversation between the two Michael Hudsons. See Part 1 here . Michael W. Hudson, reporter : Getting people to load up on debt required not only crooked tactics, but also changing their attitudes about debt. First, the finance industry stopped calling it debt . Debt meant you were in the hole. You owed . Calling it credit removed the stigma of going into deficit and instead replaced it with a sense that you were being conferred an admirable distinction. As a consumer attorney once told me, nobody wants to eat a horse mackerel. Call it tuna fish, and it sounds much tastier. In the 1950s and ’60s, the finance industry worried about ministers preaching about the evils of debt. It began offering seminars and educations materials to the clergy. “When the ministers stopped telling the people that credit was a sin,” a former industry lobbyist recalled, “they began to realize that this really was a way of life.” Then there were the TV commercials that slyly suggested — even as they denied it — that having a credit card could make you happier, smarter, sexier . By the Reagan years, the finance industry was inundating American homeowners with advertising campaigns designed to encourage them to borrow against their homes to take dream vacations or pay their children’s college tuition. One print ad showed a couple beaming in front of their home: “We just discovered $50,000 hidden in our house!” A former Citibank executive later recalled in the New York Times : “Calling it a ‘second mortgage,’ that’s like hocking your house. But call it ‘equity access,’ and that sounds more innocent.” Michael Hudson, economist : The marketeers did their jobs well. Throughout most of history, people tried to steer free of debt, above all when it came to “mortgaging the homestead.” This is the first time in history when people imagined that the way to get rich and rise in the world was to run into debt, not stay out of it. There is a belief that rising housing prices make people — and the economy — richer. But what they actually do is raise the access price for housing to new buyers. This obliges them to take on a lifetime of debt. And that raises their cost of living. All this makes economies with highly financialized real estate markets less competitive in world markets. My first real job on Wall Street was as an economist at the Savings Banks Trust Company from 1962 to ’64. (It was at this point that I changed my given name, Huckleberry — my father’s favorite book had been Huckleberry Finn — and took the name Michael. Somehow Huck Hudson didn’t sound weighty enough for someone working in the capital of high finance.) Savings Bank Trust was the “central” commercial bank for New York State’s savings banks. My job was charting deposit statistics and tracing how they were recycled into mortgage loans. It became clear to me that most deposits grew simply by accruing quarterly interest – and hence, growing at an exponential rate. The more savings grew, the more was lent out as home mortgages – and the banks’ receipt of interest was recycled continually. Instead of imagining that real estate prices rose simply out of inertia or because of the rising population density (the “man/land ratio” as it was called), I saw the exponentially rising credit/land ratio as being more important. What I learned on Wall Street wasn’t anything like what I’d been taught in my graduate economics courses at New York University. My “money and banking” course had been taught by an abstract professor who taught economics as if it were science fiction about a parallel universe. He followed the usual academic tendency to teach students MV=PT, relating the money supply only to consumer prices (and wages). Nobody even today relates money and credit to asset prices. That amazes me, because it is the core of “wealth creation” Alan-Greenspan-style — loading the economy down with debt to inflate asset prices. What surprised me somewhat more was that followers of Henry George likewise had little interest in understanding the dynamics that bid up property prices. In 1994 I was hired to become research director of the Henry George School of Social Science here in New York. My main job was to create a set of national income and product accounts (NIPA) statistics, IRS statistics and Federal Reserve flow-of-funds statistics to explain the role of real estate rent and capital gains. (In economic terms, “rent” is not the monthly payment from tenants to landlords, but rather the wealth that one accumulates simply by owning something.) These statistics showed that, for homeowners, most net rental income was absorbed by mortgage interest. That wasn’t something “Georgists” wanted to hear. Most members of the board were in their 80s or 90s, because the sect was dying out. I was a couple of decades too young to pal around with them. I had known of Henry George only that he popularized the Single Tax on land and, in the 19th century, had spoken out against economic inequality — not that he had moved far to the right of the political spectrum, or that his followers were mainly von Misians and the school was basically a feeder into the Ayn Rand “objectivist” cult that had been an early training ground for Alan Greenspan. They didn’t want to hear about finance, largely because George had treated the economy as if it operated on barter — and whatever errors or shortcomings he had, they felt obliged to adopt them. They still focused on rising population density as explaining real estate prices, and told me that they were uninterested in statistical analysis. As a result, I left there pretty quickly. Michael W. Hudson, reporter : My first job out of college was as a reporter at the Roanoke Times , a daily newspaper in the mountains of Virginia. It was the mid-1980s. I covered the police and courts beat. I spent my days talking to cops, prosecutors and defense attorneys. Many evenings I did what one old-time newsman once called “foot-in-the-door” reporting — showing up at the homes of victims and suspects of crimes and trying to get them talk to me and tell their sides of the story. Later, I began investigating big bureaucracies, such as Virginia’s juvenile prison system. I learned that in large institutions the best sources of information generally didn’t come from the top. Often the people in charge didn’t know what was going on, or they had a vested interest in putting a happy face on things. I found better information by talking with low- and middle-level folks working in the trenches. This experience, I think, prepared me for reporting on the rise of the subprime mortgage industry, from the end of George H.W. Bush’s term in office through George W. Bush’s second term. I talked to dozens, then hundreds, of former mortgage workers who described how their employers were using “boiler room” sales tactics to peddle mortgages with Rube Goldberg-like structures designed to obscure their true nature. I saw it more as a police story rather than a market or economic story. This was not a case of a few bad practices thriving around the margins, as the free market corrected itself. Fraud had become central to the mortgage market and its explosive growth. By tracing the practices on the ground to the financiers who were bankrolling them, I could see that lots of people on Wall Street knew, or should have known, what was going on. As far back as 2003, a civil trial in Southern California had unearthed information about the relationship between Lehman Brothers and a subprime lender called First Alliance Mortgage Co. In 1995, a Lehman vice president who checked out the lender wrote a memo describing the lender as a financial “sweat shop” specializing in “high pressure sales for people who are in a weak state,” a place where employees checked their “ethics at the door .” This didn’t bother Lehman much. Over the next few years, it helped First Alliance raise hundreds of millions of dollars to bankroll its lending.

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French Senate Passes Pension Cuts To Raise Retirement Age

October 23, 2010

PARIS — Under pressure from the government, the French Senate voted Friday to raise the retirement age from 60 to 62, a victory for President Nicolas Sarkozy after days of street rage, acrimonious debate and strikes that dried up the supply of gasoline across the country. The vote all but sealed passage of the highly unpopular measure, but it was unlikely to end the increasingly radicalized protests. The coming days promised more work stoppages and demonstrations by those who feel changing the retirement age threatens a French birthright. Sarkozy made overhauling the money-losing pension system a centerpiece of his project to modernize France. Undaunted by weeks of strikes, he ordered measures to unblock fuel depots and refineries to get gas flowing again to desperate motorists. “History (will remember) who spoke the truth,” Sarkozy declared during a visit Friday to a factory in central France. “What do you expect of a president? That he tells the truth and does what must be done.” With about a quarter of gas stations on empty – down from a third earlier in the week – motorists have been forced to reinvent their lives, particularly at the start of a school vacation period Saturday. Hours before Friday’s vote, riot police forced the reopening of a strategic refinery to help halt crippling fuel shortages. The impact on the crucial energy sector was an ominous specter for whole sectors of the economy. Employment Minister Laurent Wauquiez said this week that 1,500 jobs have been lost daily since the strikes began in earnest on Oct. 12. Friday’s vote came after some 140 hours of debate, with senators casting ballots by hand into a large green urn, approving the bill 177-153. The measure is expected to win final approval by both houses of parliament next week. Sarkozy’s conservative government cut short the debate via a constitutional article that accelerates the process – and gives the government final word on which of more than 1,000 amendments will get into the bill. He accused strikers of holding the French and their economy “hostage.” Speaking before the Senate vote, Labor Minister Eric Woerth said the day will come when opponents of the change “will be grateful to the president, to the government and the parliamentary majority for having had the courage to fully assume their responsibilities.” Leftist critics called the move a denial of democracy by an increasingly confrontational president. “No, you haven’t finished with retirement. You haven’t finished with the French,” said Socialist Sen. Jean-Pierre Bel, alluding to an apparently unflagging determination by unions, now joined by students, to keep protests alive – even through the upcoming week of school holidays. Students planned to block schools Tuesday, and unions scheduled strikes and protests for Thursday and again Nov. 6. Sarkozy says overhauling the pension system is vital to ensuring benefits for future generations. Many European governments are making similar choices as populations live longer and government debts soar. But French unions say the minimum retirement age of 60, in place since 1982, is a hard-earned right and maintain the working class will be unfairly punished. Many fear it is also a first step to dismantling an entire network of benefits, including long vacations and state-subsidized health care, that make France an enviable place to work and live. Guy Fischer, a Communist senator, denounced the pension overhaul as “brutal, unjust and inefficient.” Like other critics, he said that under the proposal, 85 percent of costs are paid by workers, leaving companies off the hook. The legislation phases in the new system, with retirement at 62 in force in 2018. It also raises the age for retirement with full benefits from 65 to 67. Hours before the Senate vote, helmeted riot police in body armor shoved striking workers aside to force open the gates of the Total SA refinery at Grandpuits, east of Paris, one of four refineries in the Paris region. A bastion of resistance, Grandpuits had been shut down for nine days – one of the nations’ 12 refineries on strike. “The strikers have opened the valves,” said Franck Monchon, a delegate of the hard-line CGT union. Protesters symbolically burned a coffin after the police intervention. Despite the government’s efforts to conquer union resistance, Prime Minister Francois Fillon said it would take several days to end gasoline shortages. The government began unblocking fuel depots days ago and is allowing tanker trucks on the road on Sunday, when they are normally forbidden. It has ordered oil companies to pool fuel to ensure gas stations are stocked. The prime minister convened oil industry executives Friday to review the country’s lagging fuel supplies. The head of the national petroleum industry body, Jean-Louis Schilansky, says it is struggling to import fuel to make up for the shortfall, because strikers are also blockading two key oil terminals, in Le Havre and Marseille. Dozens of tankers remained anchored in the waters off Marseille, unable to unload. “The problem isn’t so much finding the oil; it is getting it in to the country,” he said. “If the depots and refineries remain blocked, we will not make it.” Nevertheless, Schilansky insisted that France has weeks or months of fuel reserves. Marc Touati, head economist for Global Equities, was somber about the consequences of prolonged protests by the fuel sector, saying such a scenario could wipe out between 0.1 and 0.2 percentage points of economic growth. The government predicts economic growth of 2 percent next year, after 1.5 percent in 2010. Violence around student protests have added a new dimension to the volatile mix. “It is not troublemakers who will have the last word in a democracy,” Sarkozy told workers at a factory in the Eure-et-Loir region, promising to find and punish rioters. “If we stop companies like you from working, who will pay?” ___ Duclos reported from Grandpuits. Associated Press writers Angela Charlton and Greg Keller and AP Television News reporters Jonathan Shenfield in Lyon and Oleg Cetinic in Paris contributed to this report.

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Barry D. Wood: The New Normal in Manufacturing and Housing

October 19, 2010

A couple items in the news suggest that the new normal of sluggish growth is making its way through the troubled U.S. economy. On Oct 16, one hundred or so members of the United Auto Workers picketed their own union headquarters in Detroit to protest an agreement that allows the new General Motors to pay some workers half of what had been a $28 per hour union wage. This second tier wage structure is set to take effect at GM plant near Pontiac, Michigan that will assemble small cars that were to have been manufactured in South Korea. Unemployment in Pontiac is 30% and the financial situation there is so dire that the police department is to be disbanded and public safety turned over to the county in order to save $2 million per year. The idled GM plant ten miles north of Pontiac at Lake Orion would employ 1,500 workers. Michigan lawmakers and the business community lobbied aggressively to persuade GM to manufacture the new small-size Chevys and Buicks in Michigan. The company, which received billions from taxpayers to recover from last year’s bankruptcy and still majority owned by the government, finally agreed but said the Lake Orion plant wouldn’t be profitable unless the lower wage scale was in place. Welcome to the new normal in manufacturing. In Chicago last Thursday, Jamie Dimon, head of JP Morgan Chase presented a particularly gloomy economic outlook prepared by the chief economists of 150 of the nation’s biggest companies. Dimon said business confidence had fallen by a third in just the past six months. He worries that the economy is growing so slowly that unemployment is likely to remain above 9% throughout 2011. Bank stocks meanwhile plummeted as investors pondered the latest debacle in the residential mortgage market where botched documentation procedures by mortgage servicers have led a de facto moratorium on residential foreclosures. The prospect of huge additional losses on bad mortgage loans sent shares of Bank of America down 11%. Several housing economists worry that a delay in foreclosures will prolong the three-year-long devastating slump in residential housing. They argue that foreclosures need to be sped up not slowed down. Joshua Shapiro, housing specialist at MFR in New York, says, “the best thing is for prices to get to a level that clears the market.” Currently, many realtors say that since the government’s tax credit on home purchases expired in April prospective buyers have been staying out of the market on the expectation that prices will fall further. That is a sentiment share by housing economist Mark Zandi in West Chester, Pennsylvania who believes home prices are likely to decline another 5% before the market begins to slowly recover probably in 2013. Zandi likewise says, “the sooner we work through this (foreclosure inventory) the sooner the economy can take off.” Tony Downs, a housing specialist at Washington’s Brookings Institution, is more pessimistic saying that home prices may keep declining for another five years. Nationally, home prices are down about 30% from their 2006 peak and 25% of all homeowners are underwater on their mortgages. Zillow, the housing data company, says that there are 8 million empty or foreclosed homes in the country and that 3.8 million more could slip into that category. Christopher Whalen of International Risk Analytics says only 25% of likely foreclosures have yet occurred. Mortgage interest rates, meanwhile are at their lowest levels since 1951 with a 30-year mortgage now available at 4.19%. Despite a high affordability index and extraordinarily low rates, the property market remains depressed. Calling the housing market a disaster, John Makin of the American Enterprise Institute in Washington jokes that the best way to price a home is to take the assessed value and multiply by .5. Mark Fogarty of the National Mortgage News dryly observed recently that because so many homes have been repossessed, banks are selling more homes than builders. If, as Fogarty asserts, housing typically leads the nation into recession and also leads it out, the hard times will be with us quite a while longer. Welcome to the new normal in housing.

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David Isenberg: The Liability of Using a PMC to do Foreign Police Training

October 8, 2010

Last month the independent publication Intelligence Online reported that Altegrity , the “global security solutions and specialized law enforcement training company” headquartered in Falls Church, Virginia, which as of this past August also owns Kroll Inc. is counting on the extensive contacts of William J. Bratton, formerly Chairman of Altegrity Risk International (ARI) and now Kroll Chairman, who headed the Los Angeles Police Department for seven years, to help it nab some of the lucrative foreign police force training contracts that Dyncorp’s International Police Training Program has monopolized in recent years. Okay, nothing exceptional there. Companies hire people all the time in order to capitalize off their past and present business contacts. And if DynCorp gets some competition in training foreign military or police forces that is a good thing. I’ve written in the past, here and here about some problems DynCorp has had doing that. But the real question is whether the benefits of using any PMC for this job outweigh the costs. To be sure, PMC supporters have a large number of countries to point to where PMC have done exactly that, and in most cases have done so without major problems. Of course, most of those contracts have been far smaller than those contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan which have seen major problems. But some people, who have the credentials to back up their viewpoints, have their doubts. Let’s look at a recent U.S. Army Peacekeeping & Stability Operations Institute (PKSOI) paper. The PKSOI serves as the U.S. Army’s Center of Excellence for Stability and Peace Operations at the Strategic and Operational levels in order to improve military, civilian agency, international, and multinational capabilities and execution. The paper is ” U.S. Military Forces and Police Assistance in Stability Operations: The Least-Worst Option to Fill the U.S. Capacity Gap ” by Colonel (U.S.-Army Ret.) Dennis E Keller. He writes: DoS INL directly contracted with DynCorp International to provide 690 International Police Liaison Offcers (IPLOs) who provide assessment, training, and mentoring functions for Iraqi police in the feld. INL funded DoJ’s ICITAP, which then contracted Military Professional Resources Inc. (MPRI), to provide International Police Trainers (IPTs), who provide assistance to Iraq’s police training academies. INL also funded 143 Border Enforcement Advisors, 123 of whom were provided by an INL contract with DynCorp, and 20 of whom were provided by an ICITAP contract with MPRI. DoJ’s OPDAT [U.S. Department of Justice, Offce of Overseas Prosecutorial Development, Assistance and Training] had provided seven Resident Legal Advisors (RLAs) to Iraq as of February 2008. Six RLAs were deployed to Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs) in Iraqi Provinces, with the seventh RLA in Baghdad. The interagency arrangement provides that CPATT and MNSTC-I set overall requirements for the civilian security development mission, that Multi-National Force–Iraq (MNF-I) exercises operational control over IPLOs and IPTs supplied by INL and ICITAP, and that ICITAP and INL manage and oversee the contracts with service providers such as DynCorp and MPRI. At first glance, it would seem that these interagency arrangements among DoS INL, DoJ ICITAP, DoD, and USAID for civilian police training, along with the international academies supported by DHS, more than replicate USAID’s police training prior to 1974. However, it is important to note that ICITAP and INL’s police training, unlike USAID’s Cold War-era police training, is executed by contract police trainers, usually through the large contractors DynCorp and MPRI in the case of the police training in Iraq and Afghanistan. While using a private sector company to contract police trainers on a short-term basis does enable a rapid increase in the quantity of trainers available, it also has some inherent disadvantages when compared with the use of full-time USG employees to manage and conduct foreign police training. It is notable that in its heyday, USAID’s OPS had 590 permanent employees, which included overseas advisors and trainers as well. As of 2007, to provide support for the much-larger force of contracted police trainers in Iraq and Afghanistan, DoS INL increased its staffng by adding 64 permanent positions in Washington, and increasing its Embassy Baghdad staff to 20 people– to supervise a contracted police trainer force of some 833 police trainers in Iraq alone. However, these low ratios of permanent government employees to temporarily contracted police trainers allow the permanent staff to conduct only the minimal contract oversight and broad policy guidance for law enforcement development. They are not able to develop more-detailed procedures and greater operational oversight of police and law enforcement reform. Simply using a contracting mechanism to conduct police training does not create the kind of institutional capacity in the USG that is required for a consistently effective approach to enabling local police to establish and maintain a safe and secure environment in a recovering state. Contracted police trainers often cannot or will not operate in nonpermissive environments, thus confning their training to the capital city or secure areas while leaving unsecured remoter areas of a country without desperately needed police trainers and mentors, as is often the case in Iraq and Afghanistan today. Moreover, if a particular contracted police trainer/mentor is identifed as having superior ability to impart police skills and values in a foreign environment, there is no mechanism to keep that person on at DoS INL or elsewhere in the USG to help establish institutional knowledge and long-term capacity to manage and conduct foreign police training. P.S. I should note that the September/October issue of Foreign Affairs has a letter to the editor by Senator Edward E. Kaufman (D-Delaware) in which he comments on a previous article by Defense Secretary Robert Gates,who wrote about ways to improve the advising and mentoring capacity of the Defense Department. Sen. Kaufman notes in passing, The U.S. government must also better train foreign police. The State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs has had success in training civilian law enforcement agencies around the globe, but its model has not worked in Afghanistan. The United States needs a more robust civilian approach to partnering with foreign law enforcement and defense counterparts. Something so critical should not be an afterthoughts or be contracted out to private companies.

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Video: Correa Vows to Purge Ecuador Police After Alleged Coup: Video

October 1, 2010

Oct. 1 (Bloomberg) — Ecuador’s President Rafael Correa vowed to overhaul the police force after officers protesting a wage cut held him captive, forcing a military rescue mission that left two dead. Bloomberg’s Nathan Gill reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Alfred Gingold: THE WEASEL BLINKS

September 29, 2010

Readers of my previous recent posts know that my wife and I are locked in combat with our mortgage bank, which persists in creating false penalties to add to our mortgage bill. Last week, the day after the receipt from our certified letter to Jamie Dimon returned to us, we received a voice mail from Heather Yomboro of the Chase Home Finance Executive Office. Actually, she lavished two calls on us, which we couldn’t return until the next day, by which time a Fedex from Heather had appeared under our door to the effect that if she did not hear back from us, Chase would assume the matter closed. After three months of studiously ignoring us, the Weasel demands action. In 2008, the last time we wrote to Mr. Dimon, the fixer assigned to our case came from the Chase Executive Resolution Committee, which still sounds to me like a branch of the East German Secret Police, and indeed, our fixer would’ve been right at home in the Stasi, her humorless manner balanced between cool politesse and infuriating snottiness. Fortunately, I noticed that she bristled at being called Ma’am, so I called her Ma’am every chance I got. Chase’s Executive Office must be a pleasanter place that its Executive Resolution Committee; at least Heather Yomboro is a good deal pleasanter than Ms. Stasi was. She bore the good news that our September mortgage payment was finally accepted and our fraudulent late penalties removed. To our astonishment, she apologized on behalf of the bank for sticking us with the neighbor’s water bill and acknowledged that the Tax Department “jumped the gun” on our July tax payment, paying it before it was due so we could be escrowed for being late. I pointed out that this is not the first time Chase has pulled this stunt, not even the second. She apologized for that too. Apologized! Be still my heart. But even if Heather Yomboro is pleasant and courteous, she is still a Chase employee, so I was wary. And it turned out that the real reason for her call was that the bank is out of pocket for those improper tax payments. The NYC Tax Office, bless its stony heart, won’t return their dough, simply crediting the funds toward our tax bill. So, Heather said, we must return those funds to Chase. Alternatively, she suggested, we could call the NYC Tax Office and persuade them to return Chase’s money, then pay in our taxes ourselves. Not a chance. Can you imagine the length of the phone tree I’d have to wait through in order to plead the bank’s case? Well, Heather opined, “the real problem here is that the city won’t return our money to us.” I reminded her that the real problem here is her employer’s relentless greed and procedural sloppiness. Heather reminded me that, heck, a bank is really nothing more than a group of individuals who occasionally make, you know, mistakes. If you say so, Heather, although I’m inclined to see your bank, at least, as a sinister cadre of weasels devoted to nicking every penny it can get by tooth, claw or sleaze. I told Heather that before we would even consider paying Chase the money it can’t get back from the city, we require a written statement of what we had discussed, included a listing of the various ways the bank attempted to defraud us: the water bill, the premature tax payment, the cooked up penalties. She agreed readily. That was six days ago and no such letter has arrived. However, Chase did send us a check for eighteen bucks, compensation for the certified letters we sent to Jamie et al. I’d mentioned the cost of those letters to Heather and that our other attempt to get Chase’s attention had failed. They sent us the check without even a receipt from us (good thing too because I still can’t find it). It was a nice gesture, much more convincing than the Weasel’s customary sign-off, which graces this letter too: “Chase’s goal is to provide the highest level of quality service.” Nice, but I doubt the sincerity. As a public service, we offer some advice for all who have issues with Chase Home Weasel: Don’t bother with the indifferent lugnuts of Customer Care or the unscrupulous bean-counters of the Tax Department. Write directly to Jamie Dimon himself, certified mail. In our experience, it’s the only way there is to get the bank’s attention, and he’s probably got time on his hands now that he’s sold his house. Here’s his contact info: Jamie Dimon JP Morgan Chase & Co. 270 Park Avenue New York, NY 10017 jamie.dimon@jpmchase.com Phone: 212-270-1111 Fax : 212-270-1121 Meanwhile, we await Chase’s next missive while, of course, paying our mortgage on time.

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Naomi Wolf: Banks Complicit in Fraud — Is it Systemic?

August 25, 2010

Well, just when I thought my ‘ Banks Siding Against the Customer in Bank Fraud ‘ story couldn’t get any more shocking — it did. I had assumed that when I posted the account this week of how WaMu and now Chase were apparently systematically stonewalling customers — myself included — who had experienced bank fraud, I might hear from a handful of other consumers. I had hoped thus to see if, indeed, as the insider emails that were handed to me by accident by a WaMu official seem to indicate, this practice is systemic, deliberate and driven — as actuary (and bank fraud victim) Geoff Kischuk pointed out to me — by a great deal of profit…for the banks. I was unprepared, however, for the sheer volume of the stories that readers across America have sent me detailing experiences in which banks collude with fraud, cover it up, protect the identity of the scammer, even from police, or even manipulate customers’ bank accounts themselves. These cover-ups are indeed systemic, highly profitable for the banks, and getting worse. The stories are heart-wrenching: fraud, and banks’ collusion with it, ruining young people’s credit at twenty-one — no matter how many efforts they make to clear the record; bed-bound, frail elderly being harassed by banks to pay for fraud the banks know has been perpetrated by scammers; and small businesses finding, as actually Geoff Kischuk himself did, that forty, fifty or sixty thousand dollars have vanished electronically from their business accounts — and that they must then fight tooth and nail simply to close the accounts, even as fees rack up. I had thought I was alone in experiencing a bank — WaMu, and now Chase — that refused to release video of the one writing forged checks on my account, to the police. When I was handed the inside emails by accident, I saw that their fraud department had actually made note of the person’s appearance — one that confirmed details I had given to the police — even as they were telling the police the video did not exist! But to my horror I heard from several other consumers that their banks had done the same thing, even in the face of a police investigation. I had thought I was alone in having a bank that kept passing fraudulent checks even after I had placed a fraud alert on the account — but several other consumers wrote in confirming that not only had a bank employee opened false accounts in a relative’s name — but after they had called the bank on it, the bank kept clearing their stolen checks! Well, I certainly now felt less alone — but far more outraged and alarmed, on behalf of all of us, especially those most economically vulnerable; for the big picture, put together, looks far, far uglier than even my own disturbing experience had prepared me to see. There now appears to be a major business of banks profiting to the point of colluding with fraud (bank fraud and identity theft is over a billion-and-a-half dollar “business” every year); this is made even more alarming because it is so insidious — many banks now manipulate customers’ withdrawals in time sequence and give customers a misleading balance figure that does not show their recent withdrawals. Thus, in both ways, the bank can and does hit the customer with far more overdraft fees. This is not a mini-industry, as I reported earlier this week; I now see this is a mega-industry. ‘Go green!’ urges your bank. But an IT expert wrote me warning that I should let people know that they should not use Windows to do online banking unless they are very computer-savvy: “Banks and mutual funds encourage you to do your finances online because it benefits them but it puts your account at risk,” he cautioned. He directed me to this Washington Post investigation . “This terrifying link explains technologically what happened to Kischuk, to me and so many others: hackers can easily wipe out tens of thousands of dollars from your account, and even cover their tracks; and, since the banks are making so much money from this and other forms of fraud, it is not in their interest to alert you to how easily this is done, once you are banking online.” Many others who wrote to me have also been charged by their banks for the fraud that the banks know was committed against them. ‘Economike’ encountered fraud — and his bank charged him the legal fees incurred, as well as hundreds of dollars for the fake duplicate ATM card involved. ‘Indyfem’ writes that “A few years ago…someone stole my checkbook from WaMu and wrote a check to themselves for $500.” She notes that the signature looked nothing like hers, and where the amount was supposed to be written in (‘Five hundred and no/100 dollars’) the forger wrote ‘Basketball.’ B UT WAMU cashed the check and then refused to reimburse her. ‘Peacein09′ notes that Chase is now giving him problems in this regard; and indeed, a whole website, Chasesucks.org , has arisen to detail Chase’s mistreatment of customers in these and comparable ways, and to warn them of new scams. ‘Jerrygates’ writes that “WaMu and JPMorganChase have destroyed my confidence in banking…permanently.” He adds,”I do corroborate her [that is, my] citation as sound and truthful. I have been there.” ‘Peacekitten’ had to fight for years to get back the “thousands and thousands over a period of years” wiped out from her account at Wells Fargo. I thought I was the only one who had ever had to fight to close a corrupted account — but many other consumers had had the same experience. ‘TNLcaller’ also found that “my bank wouldn’t let me close the account” after fraud had been identified. Another reader wrote to me that when she tried to close an account with twenty dollars in it at CitiBank, “they fought me tooth and nail to NOT CLOSE the account…” ‘Davmyy’ wrote that a Wells Fargo (notice any recurrent names, everyone?) banker whom his son knew opened two accounts in his son’s name without his son’s permission, committed fraud, and his son not only got no action from the bank regarding the fraud, which they were not contesting, but later saw the same employee in a new position in another branch! This to me, in a sense, is the most chilling of the accounts I received, since it dovetails with my own otherwise-inexplicable experience of the bank actively protecting their own employees at WaMu who had kept cashing forged checks on my account for months after I had alerted the bank to the fraud. It may explain the weirdly relaxed tone of ” sure, we know that someone messed with this customer’s account, whatever, have a nice weekend ” in the insider WaMu emails I received and that Chase is now trying to shrug off. It is stories like this that illustrate the nature of corruption and how it spreads within an organization; you start with passively benefiting from others’ wrongdoing — but if the money is good enough, you develop subtle systems that slowly let you collude more actively in the wrongdoing, the profit, and…the cover-up. Could it be that policy-approved ‘passive’ stealing or proxy stealing — by enabling fraud to continue, and encouraging customers to switch to an easily hacked bank medium without warning them — is so systemic that banks have, consciously or not, developed a culture of protecting actual thieves in their ranks — thieves who might blow the whistle on all these practices, if called out? A secondary but still major issue I discovered through readers’ alerts — that of people’s accounts being manipulated by the banks themselves to raise their level of overdraft fees — is so prevalent that that legal firm Zimmerman Reed devotes a whole part of its practice to it now. According to their website , banks are routinely reordering your charges on ATM or debit cards so that the largest comes first, even if you made it last: that is, if you have a hundred dollars in your account, and make purchases of ten, fifteen, thirty, fifty and ninety dollars, the bank will switch the order so that instead of facing one $40 overdraft fee, you face four. ‘Iric’ writes that Chase gave him a balance showing an amount that left out his withdrawals made many days before; he reasonably enough believed the money was there; then they processed the withdrawals, out of order, hitting him for fees. ‘Thmsnnn’ wrote that “I have had similar experiences with delayed credit posts to my account”; this customer has been charged hundreds if not thousands in extra fees in the course of five years. ‘Trgrampictures’ notes that “Wachovia systematically holds deposited checks for up to fourteen days” and that “B of A delays and then accelerates transactions that result in overdraft fees….Wachovia intentionally holds checks too in an effort to initiate overdraft fees.” Others note that they have not been able to get their banks to show them the rates on their accounts. ‘Harry Wallace’ notes that banks can increase mortgage payments by a few dollars on the anniversary date, but that banks are stealthily raising mortgage payments by twenty or thirty dollars several times a year; he notes that when one makes payments on the principle of a mortgages, it may not be recorded. “And the bank won’t show records unless you are in court.” ‘Joe Dex’ notes that every time you put in to modify a loan, the bank gets $500 — which explains why banks ask you to resubmit the application four or five times. And so on. Other readers astutely point out something I can confirm in my recent visit to Europe: pretty much every EU bank customer now uses an ATM card with a chip, PIN number and photograph that make it almost impossible for a third party to misuse it (indeed US bank debit cards, without those security systems built in, are not accepted in many places in Europe for that reason, even if it is drawn on a global bank with local branches). Why do we not have access to such secure debit cards here? Why indeed: look to the bank lobby, that influences our legislation in a way it cannot in Europe. Banks in Europe lose, along with the customer, when there is fraud; banks here? It’s a billion plus dollar party annually, and the banks have invited themselves. What is the takeaway? Many readers directed me to the movement away from big banks, Moveyourmoney.org , and to the benefit of small local credit unions. That is powerful; but just as powerful is knowing the aggregate of all these stories; as awful as it is to learn the truth about the big picture, it is good to warn others — and best of all to know that none of us is alone. It will take quick action to prevent this situation from worsening, especially as banks are now frantically working to skirt new regulations put into place over the past year and a half. Consider potential legislation in Oregon , proposed by the Oregon Bankers Association last session and sent by an industry insider, that would have given fraudulent powers of attorney the benefit of the doubt in fraud claims unless the customer — rather than the bank — could prove fraud had occurred. Needless to say, this is a near impossible task for average consumers. Surely Oregon isn’t the only state where banks have similar ideas (a similar policy also exists in California, per CA probad code Sec. 4303, which allows third parties to rely on anything that appears to be notarized — an easily forged act).

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Medea Benjamin: Blackwater vs. Pinkwater: The Wife of Erik Prince Picks a Fight With CODEPINK

August 23, 2010

It felt surreal to be inside the home of Erik Prince, the founder, owner and chairman of Blackwater (or Xe, as it is now called). Prince, a former Navy Seal, provides security for the CIA, the Pentagon and the State Department. His company trains 40,000 people a year in skills that include personal protection. Yet his home in McLean, Virginia, has no security. None. Not even a fence or a guard dog or a No Trespassing sign. And his mother-in-law, who helps care for his young children, invited a total stranger — me — into his home without hesitation. I had gone to Prince’s home, together with two CODEPINK colleagues, assuming it would be empty. I’d read in the New York Times that Mr. Prince and his family had moved out of the country, fleeing from a series of civil lawsuits, criminal charges and Congressional investigations stemming from his company’s contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan. According to the news, “In documents filed last week in a civil lawsuit brought by former Blackwater employees accusing Mr. Prince of defrauding the government, Mr. Prince sought to avoid giving a deposition by stating that he had moved to Abu Dhabi [which is in the United Arab Emirates] in time for his children to enter school there on August 15.” Susan Burke, the lawyer seeking the deposition, announced that she was flying to the Emirates to find him. I had been feeling particularly upset about Blackwater lately. Seeing the combat troops leaving Iraq, I’d been thinking about the banner CODEPINK members held in countless anti-war vigils: “Iraq War: Who Lies? Who Dies? Who Pays? Who Profits?” Politicians lied about weapons of mass destruction, Iraqis and American soldiers died, U.S. taxpayers paid, and companies like Blackwater make a killing. In just a few years, Blackwater received over $1 billion in U.S. government contracts, contracts that accounted for 90 percent of its revenue. Erik Prince, the company’s sole owner, was now taking his profits, trying to sell the company and running away to the Emirates, a country that has no extradition treaty with the United States. So we decided to make a symbolic gesture of visiting his home in McLean to bid good riddance to bad rubbish. On Friday, August 20, five days after the Prince children were supposed to be starting their new lives as schoolchildren in the Emirates, we MapQuested the old McLean home and drove there, ready to take a photo with our “Adios Diablo Prince” sign and leave. But when we got there, to our surprise we could see through the window that the house was full of people and furniture. There were no moving boxes, no empty rooms. Could the new owners have settled in so quickly? Curious, I rang the doorbell and before I knew it, I was invited in and found myself inside the living room with a bunch of young children and several adults, who turned out to be grandma, grandpa and wife Joanna Prince. The rest happened very quickly. Joanna asked who I was and why I was there. I asked the same questions: Was this the Prince family and if so, why weren’t they in Abu Dhabi? She freaked, told the grandparents to call the police, and she pushed me out the door. We hung around outside waiting for the police. We wanted to assure them that there was no problem — that I had indeed been invited inside and left when asked to leave. In the meantime, I wrote a letter to Erik. Dear Erik Prince, On behalf of U.S. taxpayers, we say “Shame on You.” Through your company Blackwater, or Xe as you now like to call it, you made — or should I say stole? — hundreds of millions of dollars and your employees also killed innocent civilians in Iraq. You should be held responsible. Don’t run away to the Emirates to escape prosecution. Stay here in the USA and face the consequences of your actions, like a good Christian. Sincerely, Pinkwater When the police arrived, Joanna Prince lied and said I’d been told to leave the house and refused. I was arrested, charged with trespassing, held for 5 hours and forced to pay $500 in bail. I have to appear in court on September 28. So does Joanna Prince. Will she show up in court or will she — like her husband — run away to Abu Dhabi? Will the court subpoena her to appear? Will her husband, a man who shuns publicity, tell her that she is crazy to pick a public fight with CODEPINK (or Pinkwater, as we now call ourselves) and make her drop the charges? Will I be able to sue her for false arrest? Stay tuned for round two of Xe (formerly Blackwater) vs. Pinkwater (formerly CODEPINK). You can see the video of this episode here:

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David Isenberg: The GAO Transcripts, Part 22: A Convoy Was Attacked? Really, You Don’t Say

July 28, 2010

This is the twenty second installment of the Government Accountability Office interview transcripts that were prepared pursuant to the July 2005 GAO report ” Rebuilding Iraq: Actions Needed To Improve Use of Private Security Providers .” The GAO met with two PSCs to get their viewpoint on interacting with the U.S. military. Who they can’t be determined from the transcript. But from their viewpoint the military could have done better in certain regards. For example: During this incident, a _____________ convoy was attacked for two days. _____________ equested aid from the miIitary, but received none. 41 assets were lost. After this incident, _____________ management team contacted the military. The military had no idea that the convoys were attacked even though they were accompanied by military vehicles. _____________ was aware of the situation because they have intra-convoy communication with a convoy movement control center. _____________ ___________ ater learned that the military escort that was supposed to be accompanying the convoy did not request aid or release information on the convoy’s situation. Also, the U.S., military, in their view did not have qualified personnel for convoy duty. _____________ feels that the _____________ support provided by the military are inexperienced. Most of the _____________ the convoys were previously cooks, etc and had not shot a gun since base camp training. Of course, this would have been during the first year and a half after the U.S. invaded Iraq so the situation likely improved in terms of the ability of U.S. soldiers Standard disclaimer: I have put in ( _____ ) to reflect those words of phrases which have been blacked out in the transcript. I have also put in the underlining as it appeared in the original transcript. As in the transcript, I have left out letters from various words, even when it seems obvious what the word is. Prepared by: Kate Walker Index Date Prepared: October 19, 2004 DOC Number. 1195724 Reviewed by: Carole Coffey DOC Library: Goal 2 Job Code. 350544 Record of Interview Title Interview with Contractor Purpose To gain on-the-ground insight to the Contractor perspective Contact Method Face-to-face Contact Place _____________ Contact Date October 9, 2004 Participants _____________ _____________ _____________ Carole Coffey, Analyst in Charge, GAO Glenn Furbish, Senior Analyst, GAO Kate Walker, Analyst, GAO Comments/Remarks: We met with _____________ and _____________ to discuss their experiences in interacting with the military. _____________ currently is currently working on tasks order _____________ __________________________ and task order _____________of all task orders which provides _____________n Iraq. CONVOY SUPPORT The military has complete control of convoy movements. The rnilltary decides the number of escorts necessary given the threat level. In addition to military support, the Kuwaiti Military Police also escort the convoy. The current standard protocols for convoys in Kuwait are: _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ The Army takes a “hands-off’ approach to convoys traveling in Iraq. When asked if he ever felt that the level of support that the Army had given him was insufficient, _____________ plied that he was a civilian and he really does not know what adequate protection warrants. _____________ did indicate, however, that the level of protection the military provides had been increased since an incident on 8 and 9 April 2004. During this incident, a _____________ convoy was attacked for two days. _____________ equested aid from the miIitary, but received none. 41 assets were lost. After this incident, _____________ management team contacted the military. The military had no idea that the convoys were attacked even though they were accompanied by military vehicles. _____________ was aware of the situation because they have intra-convoy communication with a convoy movement control center. _____________ ___________ ater learned that the military escort that was supposed to be accompanying the convoy did not request aid or release information on the convoy’s situation. After learning about the attack, the military increased security force protection and reduced the convoy size from _____________ In addition, the military added _____________ support, which convoys did not have before. The military also gave _____________ nvoy tracking system called Joint Distribution Logistic Management (JDLM) to help monitor their convoys _____________ so uses Qualcom to communicate with ifs convoys. Page 1 Record of interview _____________ also finds that military support is often unfamiliar with the territory. After the April incident, the military also told _____________ that they were going to get _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ __________________________ _____________ _____________ feels that the _____________ support provided by the military are inexperienced. Most of the _____________ the convoys were previously cooks, etc and had not shot a gun since base camp training. _____________ believes that the military is conserving their assets for more risky endeavors. TRANSFER POINTS _____________ reported that _____________ had noted that transfers between Army and Marine area of responsibility (AOR) are not seamless. Most recently, a convoy traveling to Anaconda that was being escorted by the Army had one of their trucks shot up by a Marine as the convoy entered the Marines AOR. _____________ heard some complaints regarding the support given by the Marines. He believes that the Marines feel that since _____________ is an Army contract that they should not be held responsible for their protection. _____________inds that “the Marines are a very independent group that likes to do things themselves.” He says there are a lot of “flexing over who’s in charge” between the Army and the Marines. MILITARY AID _____________ indicated that has a military contact person for times of need. Depending on the type of situation _____________ will call upon the aid of either the army or the Kuwaiti Ministry of Interior (KMOI). Typically _____________ will request help from KMOI in minor situations and rely upon military aid for larger problems. INTERNAL REPORTING AND COMMUNICATIONS Internally, _____________ tracks damages to its trucks incurred via rocks, IEDs, etc. _____________ believes that _____________ has good internal communication, but external communication with the military is not strong. _____________ latest fatality occurred south of Baghdad, when a _____________ ommander was killed by an IED. According to _____________ he military had known about the IED, but had not told anyone about it because they had heard that the IED was not live. RULES OF ENGAGEMENT Under the agreed upon rules of engagement _____________ mployees and subcontractors are not allowed to attack insurgents unless they are returning fire. _____________ employees are not allowed to take proactive attacks. CURRENT SECURITY SITUATION IN IRAQ Since the April convoy attack, _____________ ports that they have seen more security from the military. _____________ s, however, that they are still operating in a war zone and vulnerable to the insurgents. Pge 2 Record of Interview IMPROVEMENTS IN IRAQ _____________ would like to see increased route security, especially on main supply routes (MSR). At any given time, there are nearly _____________ convoys moving per week on MSRs. _____________ elieves that the military should be more proactive in protecting these routes. Extra support for convoys moving north would also improve the situation in Iraq as insurgents are aware that convoys _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ _____________ elieves that the military needs to reassess their policies dealing with PSCs. He believes that the rules of engagement for PSC need to be clarified. _____________ _____________ feels that _____________ has an advantage over other PSCs in their relationship with the military, as_____________ deals with the military directly and have full visibility. There has been some talk of creating a military “bubble” in Iraq and having the military control movements within the inner triangle of Cedar, Mosul, and Alasad in Iraq. In this central triangle, only military vehicles would travel and contractors would provide transportation and services to the main entry points. _____________ elieves that this system would be more successful because the military would be better able to manage its own personnel and improve internal communications. Page 3 Record of Interview

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AIG Settlement: Insurance Giant Agrees To Pay Investors $725 Million

July 16, 2010

COLUMBUS, Ohio — American International Group Inc. and some of its directors and officers have agreed to a $725 million settlement to resolve allegations of wide-ranging fraud laid out in a class action suit led by three Ohio pension funds. Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray said Friday the latest figure will combine with previous AIG settlements reached with secondary defendants to pay about $1 billion to shareholders, including pensions representing firefighters, police, teachers, librarians and others. He characterized it as the 10th largest securities litigation settlement in U.S. history. The lawsuit alleged anti-competitive market division, accounting violations, and stock price manipulation by AIG between October 1999 and April 2005. “The serious misconduct by AIG more than deserves today’s large settlement,” Cordray said. AIG said in a statement it was glad to have the matter resolved. “This settlement ends a long-standing lawsuit, allowing AIG to continue to focus its efforts on paying back taxpayers and restoring the value of our franchise for the benefit of all our stakeholders,” it said. The federal government bailed out New York-based AIG in September 2008 as the financial crisis spiraled out of control. The insurer has received aid packages with a total value of $182.5 billion from the government. In return for that financial support, the government received an 80 percent stake in AIG. Cordray’s office represented the Ohio Public Employees Retirement System, State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio, and the Ohio Police and Fire Pension Fund, who were lead plaintiffs in the lawsuit. The settlement still requires court approval, after which an initial payment will be made of $175 million, Cordray said. AIG will fund the remaining $550 million through one or more offerings of common stock. If the necessary amount can’t be raised, plaintiffs will have three options: terminate the agreement, acquire shares of AIG stock worth $550 million, or grant an extension, he said. The suit alleged that AIG: _Committed accounting fraud that culminated in a $3.9 billion restatement in May 2005 that included an array of transactions through which the company artificially boosted its reported claims reserves. Those transactions included allegations relating to a $500 million no-risk fraudulent reinsurance transaction with General Reinsurance Corp. in relation to which one AIG executive and four General Reinsurance executives were found guilty of securities fraud. _Divided the market for certain types of insurance by paying tens of millions of dollars in undisclosed contingent commissions to insurance brokers and through bid-rigging. _Engaged in stock price manipulation that Cordray called “straightforward,” in which AIG executives ordered traders to inflate the company’s stock price. In addition to the $725 million announced Friday, the case against AIG also includes several earlier settlements: $72 million with General Reinsurance; $97.5 million with PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, and $115 million with former AIG chairman and CEO Maurice “Hank” Greenberg and other AIG executives and related corporate entities.

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Robert Siciliano: NY ATMs Get Whacked: How Secure Are You and That ATM Transaction?

June 10, 2010

ATM fraud is more common and likely than a crime committed directly against customers who are in the process of attempting to withdraw cash from the machines , according to NetworkWorld . When studying “emergency PIN technologies” they state fraud was one of the few concrete conclusions from a report about the use of emergency technology at ATMs issued by the Federal Trade Commission . Meanwhile reports indicate that thieves used “skimmer” devices to steal $217,000 from Long Island Banks between April and the end of May 2010. Banking information was then re-encoded onto the magnetic strips of blank gift cards. Investigators report that the thefts occurred in Suffolk County, N.Y. They estimate that between 100 and 200 accounts may have been cloned. The ATM is all about quick easy cash. In the world of technology, when “quick” is paired with “easy” there is a sacrifice made in regards to security. Security is often slow and difficult and most people won’t sacrifice convenience for personal security . Certainly there is a degree of security in ATMs, b ut to make them fully secure requires the end user to do more, and unfortunately users often don’t have the ability to jump through all the hoops security requires. However by understanding some of the risks and incorporating some security tips you can protect yourself. Always be vigilant when you are at an ATM. Look around the perimeter of the kiosk and beware of anyone paying unwanted attention. If someone is “lurking” they could be waiting to pounce or are shoulder surfing to get your PIN code. Choose a PIN that’s not easily guessed but can be quickly entered. Consecutive numbers or the same numbers is never a good idea. Often new ATMs won’t allow you to choose a “soft” PIN anyway. Don’t ever let anyone help you at an ATM. It’s hard to envision what kind of scenario might involve another perso n intervening at an ATM. But consider this: Your card gets stuck, someone graciously peeks their head over your shoulder to help. They un – stick your card and help you finish the transaction. In the process they got your PIN and swapped your card with another. In another example two women picked up drunk guys from bars who were waiting for a cab and persuaded them to pull money out of the ir ATMs while they watched for the PINs. Once they got back to the car one, while making out with him, would pick his pocket and hand off the card to the friend. Beware of ATM skimming and be able to recognize what an ATM skimmer looks like. Here are some excellent pictures of a well made covert skimming device attached to the face of an ATM. You really need to look for it to recognize it. Not all are as well crafted, but some are very good. ATM skimming of course is when the information on the back of your card is “skimmed” and the criminal then burns the data onto another card and makes withdrawals. They may have also installed a camera behind a brochure holder, speaker, mirror or in a light bar. If you ever get a vibe that something doesn’t feel right, just leave. Always shield the ATM keypad with your second before entering your PIN. Meanwhile Romanian Police raided 38 locations an d arrested five fraudsters allegedly part of a card cloning gang. Those detained face accusations of being members of an organized crime group, unauthorized access to a computer system, possessing card-cloning equipment, access device fraud and distributing fake electronic-payment devices. Based on this video , they didn’t get a whole lot of equipment but confiscated some cash. To help combat this type of crime, ADT unveiled the ADT Anti-Skim ATM Security Solution , which helps prevent skimming attempts and detects skimming devices on all major ATM makes and models. ADT’s anti-skim solution is installed inside an ATM near the card reader, making it invisible from the outside. The solution detects the presence of foreign devices placed over or near an ATM card entry slot, without disrupting the customer transaction or operation of most ATMs. It can trigger a silent alarm for command center response and coordinate video surveillance of all skimming activities. Also, the technology helps prevent card-skimming attempts by interrupting the operation of an illegal card reader. This technology does not require any software adjustments be made to the ATM itself, and does not connect to or affect the ATM communications network. Prior to its North American introduction, the ADT Anti-Skim ATM Security Solution was successfully field tested on dozens of ATMs of four major U.S. financial institutions in controlled pilot programs. Testing pilots yielded positive results, with no known skimming compromises occurring. Robert Siciliano personal security expert to ADT Home Security Source discussing ATM skimming on Extra TV. Disclosures .

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Two Men Arrested at JFK Airport, Charged With Plotting Terrorist Attacks

June 6, 2010

By Dan Hart June 6 (Bloomberg) — Two New Jersey men suspected of conspiring to kill American troops in Somalia were arrested at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport yesterday, the U.S. Attorney for New Jersey said in a statement. The men, Mohamed Mahmood Alessa, 20, and Carlos Eduardo Almonte, 24, were arrested as they attempted to board separate flights to Egypt on their way to join the Islamic al-Shabaab movement in Somalia, the U.S. Attorney’s office said. The FBI began investigating the men after receiving a tip about them in October 2006. A New York Police Department undercover officer met with them and recorded numerous conversations about their plan, the statement said. Almonte, speaking in April, said “there would soon be American troops in Somalia, which was good because it would not be fun to kill only Africans,” according to the criminal complaint. In November, Alessa told the undercover officer, “They only fear you when you have a gun and when you — when you start killing them, and when you — when you take their head, and you go like this, and you behead it on camera . . . We’ll start doing killing here, if I can’t do it over there.” The suspects, officials said, also watched and played videos promoting “violent” jihad and which showed attacks by al-Shabaab and other terror groups. Leave the U.S. Their preparations included physical conditioning, participating in paintball and other tactical training, and acquiring military gear and apparel for use overseas, according to the statement. Alessa is a resident of North Bergen, New Jersey, and Almonte lives in Elmwood Park, New Jersey. They were charged with conspiring to kill, maim and kidnap persons outside the U.S. Alessa’s landlord, Hemant Shah, speaking in an interview on Fox News today, said Alessa told him he planned to leave the U.S. for “probably about six months.” The U.S. is concerned about Somalia as a possible safe- haven for members of al-Qaeda, including suspects in the 1998 U.S. Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania. The al-Shabaab militia, a group controlled by militant members of the former Islamic Courts Union, took power in south and central Somalia in June 2006. The militia has claimed responsibility for much of the violence in the country since then. Insurgents Somalia’s Western-backed government, which has been led by Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed since January 2009, has been battling Islamic insurgents for the past three years. The country hasn’t had a functioning central administration since the ouster of former dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. The men are to appear in U.S. federal court in Newark, New Jersey, at 11 a.m. local time tomorrow, the office said. The defendants face a maximum penalty of life in prison if convicted. The agencies involved in the arrests were the New York Police Department, the State Department, Homeland Security’s Immigrations and Customs Enforcement, New Jersey State Police, Jersey City Police Department, Bayonne Police Department, and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the statement said. To contact the reporter on this story: Dan Hart in Washington at dahart@bloomberg.net .

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Janet Tavakoli: U.S. Recession Breeds Escalating Violent Crime

May 25, 2010

The Wall Street Journal reported that violent crime is down in the big cities in the U.S. saying this breaks the pattern between economic downturns and an increase in crime. (” Violent Crime Falls Sharply ,” Evan Perez, WSJ , May 25, 2010.) Supposedly this is because policing has advanced, not because human nature has changed. I do not believe the article is plausible. If Chicago is any indication, it is much more likely the statistics are being doctored and that the public is being lied to in a profound way. Many cities and states are strapped for cash and the public doesn’t want to hear that crime is up while police budgets are being cut. Chicago wasn’t mentioned in the article, but violent crime is way up, and the police force has been cut. I believe this increased violence is related to the economy, and it is not mere crime, it is civil unrest. The city of Chicago is being wrecked, and tourist attractions like Navy Pier are unsafe and lack police support. Last Summer Was Bad, This Summer Will Be Much Worse Last summer gang violence ruled the night at Leland and Sheridan , a neighborhood in the process of gentrifying. In the upscale Lincoln Park area, just a little further south of this unrest, men alone at night were accosted by groups of three to six men and severely beaten, robbed, and hospitalized. Seven muggings occurred in a five-day period from July 30 to August 4, 2009 . This kind of activity was unusual for these areas of Chicago until last summer. Current Escalating Violent Crime and Chicago’s Prime Lakefront Areas Shootings are way up in Chicago, and ordinary citizens–along with shorthanded police–are angry. Chicago has a gun ban, yet on Wednesday, May 19, Thomas Wortham IV, a Chicago police officer and Iraq War veteran, was shot when four gang members attempted to steal the new motorcycle the officer had brought to show his father, a retired police officer. Shots were fired, and his father saw the skirmish, ran for his gun, and managed to get off a few rounds. Two gang members were shot while two sped away dragging his fallen son’s body some distance in the process. Nine people were shot on Sunday night (May 24), and Chicago is currently in the grips of a massive crime wave that has overwhelmed our under funded police force. Gangland violence and shootings now occur up and down Chicago’s lakefront. An anonymous Chicago policeman reports what most of the mainstream media fails to report at secondcitycop.blogspot.com . The comments under the section titled “Lakefront Problems” are particularly illuminating. I don’t believe that Chicago is alone in having a recession-related escalating crime problem. High unemployment combined with under-funded shorthanded police forces make for a toxic brew. No matter how “advanced” the police force, men cannot outrun bullets. During a recession, the police force requires a larger budget, not budget cuts. Since the money has been spent, I suspect the public will be fed cooked statistics instead of being given the facts. Janet Tavakoli’s book on the causes of the global financial meltdown and how to fix it is Dear Mr. Buffett: What an Investor Learns 1,269 Miles from Wall Street .

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China, U.S. Sidestep Confrontation on Yuan as Europe, Korea Dominate Talks

May 25, 2010

By Bloomberg News May 25 (Bloomberg) — U.S.-China talks that were set up primarily to head off bilateral disputes spent much of the past two days focused on the world’s ills as Europe’s debt crisis and military tension on the Korean peninsula hijacked the agenda. About 200 U.S. officials today wrapped up meetings in Beijing as the euro’s decline to an eight-year low against the yen and a 4.7 percent plunge in the won overshadowed sparring on trade and China’s control of its exchange rate. The external distractions, both financial and geopolitical, prompted talk of closer cooperation between what will likely be the world’s two largest economies by year end. “The fact that they’re spending lots of time on North Korea and the euro area is a reflection of the current priorities for the global economy,” said Huang Yiping , a professor at the China Center for Economic Research at Peking University and a former Citigroup Inc. chief Asia economist. “These are more pressing issues than the yuan.” Almost half of President Barack Obama ’s Cabinet descended on Beijing for the annual Strategic and Economic Dialogue, led by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner . The countries signed agreements ranging from shale gas development to safety standards in China for Westinghouse Electric Co.’s nuclear reactors. China also agreed to open stock futures trading to foreign investors with Chinese licenses such as Goldman Sachs Asset Management International and Yale University. Global Police President Hu Jintao set the summit’s tone by portraying the participants as global police with a shared beat. “China and the United States face common tasks and shoulder important responsibilities ranging from promoting full recovery and sustainable growth of the world economy to managing regional hot-spots,” he said in opening remarks yesterday. Those concerns were born out as the two-day meeting wound up. Global stocks, crude oil and Asian currencies tumbled today following a report that North Korean leader Kim Jong Il ordered his military to prepare for combat last week. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index dropped 3.1 percent to 108.81 at 6.15 p.m. in Hong Kong. The euro dropped to its lowest level in eight years against the yen on concern weakness in the Spanish banking system would damp economic growth. The won fell as much as 4.7 percent to 1277.90 against the dollar. North Korea was accused by an international panel last week of sinking a South Korean warship in March and killing 46 sailors. China has yet to publicly accept the panel’s finding or condemn its communist neighbor. ‘Working Together’ “We expect to be working together with China in responding to North Korea’s provocative action and promoting stability in the region,” Clinton told reporters in Beijing. “We pledged to stay in very close consultation.” China is North Korea’s main economic and political ally as well as the host of stalled talks on its nuclear weapons program. Kim visited several Chinese cities earlier this month in his first foreign trip in four years, culminating with a Hu summit meeting. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao is heading to South Korea and Japan later this week for previously scheduled talks. The Chinese government is ready to work with the U.S. and other countries to ease Korean tensions, Vice Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai told journalists in Beijing. Two-way trade discussions made some progress. The U.S. said that Chinese officials had agreed to modify rules on encouraging homegrown technology that U.S. companies have complained may shut them out of the government procurement market. $227 Billion Deficit China in its closing statement emphasized pledges by the U.S. to overhaul controls on exports of technology to China. Last year the U.S. had a $227 billion trade deficit with China, its second-biggest trading partner. Executives from companies such as Tempe, Arizona-based First Solar Inc., Fairfield, Connecticut-based General Electric Co. and Chicago-based Boeing Co. accompanied Commerce Secretary Gary Locke on a trade mission to China that preceded the Beijing talks. The yuan also came up in discussions. I’m “as confident as I’ve ever been” that China has a growing incentive to let the yuan gain against the dollar, Geithner said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. He welcomed President Hu’s pledge of steady and gradual changes to the exchange-rate system. Traders signaled a contrary expectation. Yuan forwards fell by the most in 15 months on speculation China will delay appreciation of its currency because of Europe’s debt crisis, even as the U.S. pushes for an end to a 22-month peg. No Clear Signal “The SED talks haven’t sent any clear signal about the next move in the currency policy,” said Liu Dongliang , a Shenzhen-based analyst at China Merchants Bank Co., the country’s fifth-largest lender by market value. “There is no chance of an appreciation in the currency within the next two months if the European debt crisis doesn’t settle.” China’s Vice Premier Wang Qishan , Geithner’s counterpart at the talks, brought up Europe in the fourth sentence of his opening remarks, saying it had “brought more uncertainties to the slowly recovering world economy.” Wang’s comments were echoed by Geithner, who is heading for two days of meetings in London, Berlin and Frankfurt to discuss the $1 trillion rescue package intended to stem contagion from Greece’s debt spiral. “We agreed to support the strong programs of policy reforms and financial support now being undertaken by the nations of Europe,” Geithner said. Clinton said U.S.-China relations are back on a “positive” track after a frosty period earlier this year following U.S. arms sales to Taiwan and a meeting between Obama and the Dalai Lama , the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader. “Sino-U.S. economic relations have surpassed the bilateral scope and are having a global impact,” Vice Premier Wang said in his closing remarks. “This in itself is the biggest success of the talks.” — Michael Forsythe , Rebecca Christie , Nicole Gaouette , Yanping Li , Kevin Hamlin , Peter Cook , Stephen Engle , Eugene Tang , Judy Chen , Belinda Cao . Editors: Bill Austin , Brendan Murray To contact the reporters on this story: Michael Forsythe in Beijing at mforsythe@bloomberg.net ; Yanping Li in Beijing at yli16@bloomberg.net Rebecca Christie in Beijing at rchristie4@bloomberg.net ; Nicole Gaouette in Beijing at ngaouette@bloomberg.net

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Thai Troops Clash With Rioters After Protests End as Fires Burn in Bangkok

May 19, 2010

By Daniel Ten Kate and Supunnabul Suwannakij May 20 (Bloomberg) — Thai authorities vowed to restore order after the forced surrender of anti-government protesters sparked riots across Bangkok, threatening renewed political instability as mobs burned banks, shopping malls and the stock exchange. The government imposed an 8 p.m. curfew in a third of the country and demanded all television stations run state programming. Reports of disturbances in northeast Thailand, where many of the demonstrators live, show the widening social rifts that may thwart political reconciliation. “Clearing the demonstrators is the easy part,” said Duncan McCargo , a professor of Southeast Asian politics at the University of Leeds. By relying on force, “authorities have lost the opportunity to shape the aftermath of the protests and risk provoking an even more alarming conflict.” Rioters set at least 25 buildings afire in Bangkok and northeast Thailand, including a luxury shopping mall and television news station. They torched a city hall in Udon Thani province and seized a government building in Khon Kaen . “We will continue to fight for democracy; this is not our day,” Nattawut Saikuar , one of several Red Shirt leaders, said when he arrived at the police station in comments broadcast by TNN News. “We have been trying to do our best for the country to be truly owned by the people.” Condemning the Violence The U.S. condemned the violence and urged both sides to resolve their differences democratically. “The U.S. deeply deplores the violence and the loss of life that has resulted from clashes between security forces and protests by the United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship,” said State Department spokesman Gordon Duguid . Duguid praised Red Shirt leaders who surrendered to Thai authorities and encouraged their supporters to return home peacefully. The arson attacks drew a rebuke. “We are deeply concerned that Red Shirt supporters have engaged in arson, targeting the electricity infrastructure and media outlets and have attacked individual journalists,” Duguid said. “We condemn such behavior.” Security forces found weapons caches in the central Bangkok protest site occupied by demonstrators since April 3, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said last night. He vowed harsh punishments for “terrorists” vandalizing the city among the protesters, who say his rule is illegitimate. Gun Threat Police and soldiers may use guns to “prevent any action that will further destabilize the country,” Tarit Pengdit, director-general of the Department of Special Investigation, said last night. Arsonists may face the death penalty, he said. Few cars traveled on Bangkok roads last night as citizens heeded the curfew, television footage showed. One fire in the city substantially damaged the stock exchange, Thamon Onketpol, an adviser to the governor of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration , told Thai PBS television. After the military crackdown, about 800 children, women and elderly protesters took shelter in a temple between two burning shopping malls, Thai PBS television network said. Gunfire crackled and explosions rocked the city into the night after protest leaders were escorted from the camp’s main stage to a nearby police station. The Central World shopping mall was gutted by flames, fire official Narunart Boonkong said. Six Killed Street battles in the past week between security forces and demonstrators contributed to Thailand’s deadliest political turmoil in almost two decades. Yesterday’s clashes killed six people, including an Italian journalist, and injured 58, according to a statement on the website of the Bangkok Emergency Medical Service. The health ministry said eight people were hurt in clashes outside Bangkok. Nattawut and fellow activist Jatuporn Prompam told supporters from the main stage that they decided to surrender to avoid further bloodshed. Kasikornbank Pcl, Thailand’s third-biggest bank by assets, said a fire broke out at a branch on Rama IV Road near the main protest area. PBS reported fires in Siam Square at a Bangkok Bank Pcl branch , a Siam City Bank Pcl branch and a local theater. Power was cut at the JW Marriott Bangkok hotel . The benchmark SET Index rose 0.7 percent yesterday before closing for the day at the morning break. The baht fell 0.1 percent. ‘Special Programs’ Foreigners should carry identification when traveling, government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn said, vowing that security forces will provide stability and security during the night. Television channels will switch to “special programs,” he said. Exiled former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra , to whom many of the protesters express loyalty, said the decision to surrender prevented more casualties. “I appreciate the Red Shirt leaders’ move to save lives by surrendering to police,” he said on his Twitter account. “I am so sorry for those who lost their lives and got injured.” Abhisit’s five-part proposal to end the national divide includes measures to safeguard the monarchy, address economic inequality, ensure an independent media, create a body to investigate political violence and assess ways to change the constitution and disputed laws. ‘Even Deeper’ “After today, the divisions in the country will get even deeper,” said Michael Nelson, a visiting scholar at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University. “How can you have a stable political system when two large areas of the country are no-go zones for the two major political parties?” Thaksin, a 60-year-old billionaire, won over the poor in the northeast of the country by giving them cheap health care and loans. The demonstrators, angered by one of Asia’s widest income gaps, say Abhisit, 45, embodies a privileged class of military officers, judges, bureaucrats and royal advisers that sits above the law. Thaksin, who was ousted by the Thai army in 2006, fled the country in 2008 before a court sentenced him to two years in prison for helping his wife buy land from the government while still in power. Since 1946, when King Bhumibol Adulyadej took the Thai throne as an 18-year-old, Thailand has seen nine coups and more than 20 prime ministers. Only two of 17 constitutions since absolute monarchy ended in 1932 have mandated parliaments that are entirely elected. The king, who is revered across the nation, has been in a hospital since Sept. 19 and hasn’t spoken publicly about the current demonstrations. Abhisit’s party hasn’t won the most seats in a nationwide vote since 1992. He was picked by legislators in December 2008 after a court dissolved the pro-Thaksin ruling party for election fraud. The decision coincided with the seizure of Bangkok’s airports by protesters wearing yellow shirts who oppose Thaksin. To contact the reporter on this story: Daniel Ten Kate in Bangkok at dtenkate@bloomberg.net

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Riots, Fires Spread Across Bangkok as Army Forces Protesters to Surrender

May 19, 2010

By Daniel Ten Kate and Supunnabul Suwannakij May 19 (Bloomberg) — Rioting erupted across Bangkok after Thai security forces backed by armored vehicles cleared an anti- government protest camp and forced its leaders to surrender. “We completely control the area,” army spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd said in a televised broadcast, announcing an end to a six-week standoff that roiled the country and killed more than 60 civilians and soldiers. The government announced a curfew in the city from 8 p.m. until 6 a.m. tomorrow. Television footage showed fires burning across Bangkok, a city of nine million people. Thailand’s stock exchange was substantially damaged by fire, Thamon Onketpol, an adviser to the governor of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration , told Thai PBS television. A blaze in the building where Channel 3 is based had trapped “many people,” he said. Gunfire and explosions continued to rock the city as protest leaders were escorted from the camp’s main stage to a nearby police station. Demonstrators shot out windows and set fires in the Central World and Siam Paragon shopping malls, Channel 9 television footage showed. The government was calling for volunteers to help put out fires, spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn said. The Red Shirt demonstrators, who view Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva ’s rule as illegitimate, drew thousands of mainly rural supporters to the encampment, underscoring a widening class divide. Reports of disturbances today in northeast Thailand, where many protesters came from, indicate that political reconciliation may be difficult to achieve. ‘Continue to Fight’ “We will continue to fight for democracy; this is not our day,” Nattawut Saikuar , one of several Red Shirt leaders, said when he arrived at the police station in comments broadcast by TNN News. “We have been trying to do our best for the country to be truly owned by the people.” Street battles in the past week between security forces and demonstrators contributed to Thailand’s deadliest political turmoil in almost two decades. Today’s clashes killed four people including an Italian journalist, said Petchpong Kumjornkijjakarn, head of Bangkok’s medical emergency unit. Nattawut and fellow activist Jatuporn Prompam told supporters from the main stage that they decided to surrender to avoid further bloodshed. Kasikornbank Pcl, Thailand’s third-biggest bank by assets, said a fire broke out at a branch on Rama IV Road near the main protest area. PBS reported fires in Siam Square at a Bangkok Bank Pcl branch , a Siam City Bank Pcl branch and a local theater. All financial institutions, including the stock exchange, will be closed for the rest of the week. Power was cut at the JW Marriott Bangkok hotel . Stocks Gain The benchmark SET Index rose 0.7 percent before closing for the day at the morning break. The baht fell 0.1 percent. Red shirt supporters set fire to a city hall in Udon Thani Province in northeast Thailand, INN News reported. In neighboring Khon Kaen , protesters broke into the city hall to demand an end to the military assault in Bangkok, Channel 3 TV said. The government remains committed to a new election and measures to bring about reconciliation, Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. “Hard-core” protesters are still roaming the capital’s streets and tourism has suffered because of the violence, he said. Thaksin Loyalty Foreigners should carry identification when travelling, Panitan said, vowing that security forces will provide stability and security during the night. Television channels will switch to “special programs,” he said. Exiled former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra , to whom many of the protesters express loyalty, said the decision to surrender had prevented more casualties. “I appreciate the Red Shirt leaders’ move to save lives by surrendering to police,” he said on his Twitter account. “I am so sorry for those who lost their lives and got injured.” Abhisit’s five-part proposal to end the national divide includes measures to safeguard the monarchy, address economic inequality, ensure an independent media, create a body to investigate political violence and assess ways to change the constitution and disputed laws. “After today the divisions in the country will get even deeper,” said Michael Nelson, a visiting scholar at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University. “How can you have a stable political system when two large areas of the country are no-go zones for the two major political parties?” Corruption Conviction Thaksin, a 60-year-old billionaire, won over the poor in the northeast of the country by giving them cheap health care and loans. The demonstrators, angered by one of Asia’s widest income gaps, say Abhisit, 45, embodies a privileged class of military officers, judges bureaucrats and royal advisers that sits above the law. Thaksin, who was ousted by the Thai army in 2006, fled the country in 2008 before a court sentenced him to two years in prison for helping his wife buy land from the government while still in power. Since 1946, when King Bhumibol Adulyadej took the Thai throne as an 18-year-old, Thailand has seen nine coups and more than 20 prime ministers. Only two of 17 constitutions since absolute monarchy ended in 1932 have mandated parliaments that are entirely elected. The king, who is revered across the nation, has been in hospital since Sept. 19 and hasn’t spoken publicly about the current demonstrations. Abhisit’s party hasn’t won the most seats in a nationwide vote since 1992. He was picked by legislators in December 2008 after a court dissolved the pro-Thaksin ruling party for election fraud. The decision coincided with the seizure of Bangkok’s airports by protesters wearing yellow shirts who oppose Thaksin. To contact the reporter on this story: Daniel Ten Kate in Bangkok at dtenkate@bloomberg.net

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Thai Army Seizes Protest Areas as Red Shirt Leaders Surrender Amid Gunfire

May 19, 2010

By Daniel Ten Kate and Supunnabul Suwannakij May 19 (Bloomberg) — Thai security forces backed by armored vehicles surrounded a protest camp in central Bangkok, forcing its leaders to surrender and ending a six-week standoff that roiled the country and killed more than 60 people. “We want all protesters to leave using the transportation we’re providing,” army spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd , said in a televised broadcast. “We completely control the area.” Sporadic gunfire and explosions continued to rock the area as protest leaders were escorted from the camp’s main stage to a nearby police station. Angry protesters shot out windows and set fires in the Central World and Siam Paragon shopping malls, Channel 9 television footage showed. The Red Shirt demonstrators, who view Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva ’s rule as illegitimate, drew thousands of mainly rural supporters to the encampment, underscoring a widening class divide. Reports of disturbances today in northeast Thailand, where many protesters came from, indicate that political reconciliation may be difficult to achieve. “We will continue to fight for democracy; this is not our day,” Nattawut Saikuar , one of several Red Shirt leaders, said when he arrived at the police station, in comments broadcast by TNN News. “We have been trying to do our best for the country to be truly owned by the people.” Political Turmoil Street battles in the past week between security forces and demonstrators contributed to Thailand’s deadliest political turmoil in almost two decades. Today’s clashes killed four people including an Italian journalist, said Petchpong Kumjornkijjakarn, head of Bangkok’s medical emergency unit. Nattawut and fellow activist Jatuporn Prompam told supporters from the main stage that they decided to surrender to avoid further bloodshed. Kasikornbank Pcl, Thailand’s third-biggest bank by assets, said a fire broke out at a branch on Rama IV Road near the main protest area. The Bank of Thailand ordered all financial institutions in the capital to close at 1 p.m. because of security concerns, it said in a statement. The benchmark SET Index rose 0.7 percent before closing for the day at the morning break. The baht fell 0.1 percent. Red shirt supporters set fire to a city hall in Udon Thani Province in northeast Thailand, INN News reported. In northeast Khon Kaen , protesters broke into the city hall to demand an end to the military assault in Bangkok, Channel 3 TV said. Thakin Connection Exiled former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra , to whom many of the protesters express loyalty, earlier called for direct talks between the government and rally organizers. “After today the divisions in the country will get even deeper,” said Michael Nelson, a visiting scholar at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University. “How can you have a stable political system when two large areas of the country are no-go zones for the two major political parties?” Many demonstrators are loyal to Thaksin, a 60-year-old billionaire who won over the poor in the northeast of the country by giving them cheap health care and loans. The demonstrators, angered by one of Asia’s widest income gaps, say Abhisit, 45, embodies a privileged class of military officers, judges bureaucrats and royal advisers that sits above the law. Thaksin, who was ousted by the Thai army in 2006, fled the country in 2008 before a court sentenced him to two years in prison for helping his wife buy land from the government while still in power. King Bhumibol Since 1946, when King Bhumibol Adulyadej took the Thai throne as an 18-year-old, Thailand has seen nine coups and more than 20 prime ministers. Only two of 17 constitutions since absolute monarchy ended in 1932 have mandated parliaments that are entirely elected. The king, who is revered across the nation, has been in hospital since Sept. 19 and hasn’t spoken publicly about the current demonstrations. Abhisit’s party hasn’t won the most seats in a nationwide vote since 1992. He was picked by legislators in December 2008 after a court dissolved the pro-Thaksin ruling party for election fraud. The decision coincided with the seizure of Bangkok’s airports by protesters wearing yellow shirts who oppose Thaksin. To contact the reporter on this story: Daniel Ten Kate in Bangkok at dtenkate@bloomberg.net

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Parking Attendants Trained To Watch For Terrorists

May 14, 2010

LAS VEGAS — Parking attendants and meter maids could be the nation’s latest line of defense against terrorist attacks. A new government program aims to train thousands of parking industry employees nationwide to watch for and report anything suspicious – abandoned cars, for example, or people hanging around garages, taking photographs or asking unusual questions. Organizers say parking attendants and enforcement officers are as important to thwarting attacks as the two Times Square street vendors who alerted police to a smoking SUV that was found to contain a gasoline-and-propane bomb. “We can no longer afford as a nation to say, `It doesn’t impact me or my family, so therefore I’m not getting involved,’” Bill Arrington of the Transportation Security Administration told parking industry professionals at a convention this week in Las Vegas. “We’re saying, `Please, sir, get involved.’” The program has been in the works for about a year and gave its first presentation at the convention, attended by hundreds of people who run parking operations for cities, universities, stadiums and other places around the country. Funded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and administered by TSA, the program teaches parking lot operators to watch for odd activities that could precede an attack by days or months: strange odors such as diesel from gasoline vehicles, cars parked where they shouldn’t be, people who seem to be conducting surveillance by taking photos or drawing sketches. Would-be terrorists may attempt to gain access to sensitive places or materials by applying for jobs or asking employees strange questions, said Jeff Beatty, a former FBI and CIA agent who led the training in Las Vegas. The program is part of a larger effort by the government since 9/11 to enlist ordinary people – airline passengers, subway riders, bus drivers, truckers, doormen, building superintendents – to serve as the eyes and ears of law enforcement. Beatty said the idea is not to turn ordinary people into government agents. “You’re not going to be Jack Bauer. You’re not going to be James Bond,” he said. But he said terror attacks like the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 people often are preceded by warning signs. For example, Timothy McVeigh parked a getaway car in an alley near the Oklahoma City federal building with a note asking that it not be towed. He practiced walking from where he would park the truck to his car to time how long it would take to escape. Similarly, in the attempted Times Square bombing, the SUV was parked illegally on the street, its engine running. Garages nationwide stepped up security after the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, in which terrorists parked an explosives-laden truck in an underground garage. Six people were killed and hundreds injured. Many parking lot managers across the nation are already keenly aware of the threat and train their employees on what to watch for. In New York, Jose Vega, manager of a Central Parking System garage near Times Square, said the police come by once a year to brief the employees. “They tell us to look for abandoned cars,” Vega said. Tom Lozich, executive director of corporate security for MGM Mirage, which owns all or part of 11 casino-resorts on the Las Vegas Strip, said all new hires, including parking valets, housekeepers and casino cashiers, are trained to watch for signs of terrorism. City employees who write parking tickets and operate lots in Boulder, Colo., will go through the antiterror training. Molly Winter, the city’s parking services director, said: “A lot of this is just developing a sense of personal responsibility about things that just don’t seem right.” But some parking lot attendants say they are not the best people to identify suspicious activity. Nancy Montanez, an attendant in a Miami parking garage, said she spends most of her time scanning tickets, running credit cards and printing receipts. “It’s a good idea, but it would be kind of difficult because when the cars come here, they’re not here for really long,” she said. “They’re here maybe not even a minute during the period of time that I charge them and they exit.” ___ Associated Press writers Karen Matthews and Colleen Long in New York and Sarah Larimer in Miami contributed to this report.

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Times Square Bomb Suspect Is Cooperating After Admitting Role, U.S. Says

May 4, 2010

By Patricia Hurtado and Justin Blum May 4 (Bloomberg) — A naturalized U.S. citizen from Pakistan told prosecutors he tried to detonate a car bomb in New York’s Times Square to kill tourists and theater goers, and has been providing information on the terrorist plot, the U.S. said. Faisal Shahzad was accused of trying to “kill and maim persons” when he drove an improvised bomb into the crowded Manhattan neighborhood May 1, prosecutors said in a complaint unsealed in New York. Authorities said the plot dated back to December. Shahzad faces five counts including attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction and receiving bomb-making training in the Waziristan region of Pakistan. Shahzad was arrested last night at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport as he attempted to fly to Dubai. At a press conference in Washington, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said Shahzad admitted his role in the bombing attempt. “This was a terrorist plot aimed at murdering Americans in one of the busiest places in our country,” Holder said. Shahzad, who lived in Bridgeport, Connecticut, faces as much as life in prison if convicted. His initial appearance in federal court today in Manhattan was cancelled, the government said. Pakistani officials have arrested “alleged facilitators” in that country as part of a “far broader investigation,” Jane Harman , chairwoman of a House of Representatives subcommittee on homeland security and intelligence, said in a statement. Family Links Pakistan’s Dawn television reported that he had family links in the port city of Karachi, and visited it last year. Pakistan’s Urdu-language news channel, Aaj TV, reported that authorities there have detained 13 people in their investigation of the attempted bombing. The channel didn’t say where it got the information. Holder said the U.S. probe is continuing. “The FBI and their partners in this process have all the tools and experience they need to learn everything we can, and that includes what, if any, connection this individual has to terrorist groups,” President Barack Obama said today. Dubai-based Emirates Airlines said U.S. authorities removed three passengers from a New York to Dubai flight last night. Shahzad was arrested after the airliner left the gate and was recalled, according to a person familiar with the investigation. The suspect became a naturalized U.S. citizen in April 2009 after marrying an American, according to another federal official. Married Citizen Shahzad reported that he married Huma Mian and identified her as his spouse as he was seeking citizenship, according to the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the continuing investigation. Shahzad didn’t have a criminal record, the official said. In December 1998, Shahzad was granted a U.S. visa, and he received another one in April 2002, according to the official. Shahzad was traced by law enforcement authorities through his use of a disposable cell phone, the first person familiar with the investigation said. He also was tracked while overseas and identified yesterday due to his placement on a no-fly list, said the person, who declined to be identified. Shahzad was questioned without first receiving his Miranda warnings under a federal public safety exception, the person said. The warnings include telling a suspect that he has the right to remain silent and representation by an attorney. He was given the warnings after initial questioning, the person said. Secondary Screening Congresswoman Harman said Shahzad was subjected to secondary screening when he returned from Pakistan last year and information collected then helped U.S. agents track him down. “The screening yielded critical contact information that was entered into the system and used in his arrest yesterday,” Harman, a California Democrat, said in the statement. “Dots were correctly and rapidly connected.” Shahzad was put on the no-fly list yesterday, which was still being distributed when he bought his ticket, she said. Customs and Border Protection officials, who knew Shahzad was a suspect, identified the flight he was on and removed him from the plane, Harman said. Shahzad worked for three years at a company controlled by Leon Black’s private-equity firm, Apollo Management LP. Affinion Group Holdings Inc., a provider of marketing and customer- loyalty plans, employed Shahzad as a financial analyst in its accounting department from 2006 until 2009, the company said. A Faisal Shahzad is listed in public records as having lived at addresses in Bridgeport and Shelton, Connecticut, about 60 miles from Manhattan. Today, police in Bridgeport searched a home on Sheridan Street where neighbors said Shahzad once lived. Bridgeport Home Jose Nieves and Luz Caban, an engaged couple who live across the street from the house, said they were awakened at 1 a.m. by Bridgeport police who shined flashlights in their window, telling them to leave. “I was scared,” Caban said. “I thought someone was going to rob us.” Caban, 30, said he had seen Shahzad around the neighborhood, but didn’t have closer contact. Marilyn Osoria, who lives on an adjacent street, said her children saw Shahzad loading boxes in his home last summer. “He stuck out to them because he wasn’t dressed in normal clothes,” Osoria said, describing him as wearing a flowing garment. She added that he was accompanied by a teenager. LaVonne Muse, who lives behind the house, said police and federal agents removed computers and electronic equipment from the house today. She was evacuated due to a bomb threat, she said. Previous Home At his previous home in Shelton, about 10 miles north of Bridgeport, Shahzad’s neighbors said he dressed in normal clothes while his wife wore traditional Muslim clothing. Neighbor Mary Ann Galich, who lived in a house behind the suspect, said “to me, it felt like he was a normal person.” In September, according to state court records, Chase Home Finance LLC brought a property foreclosure action against a Faisal Zhahzad and Huma Mian in Milford, a town east of Bridgeport near the city of New Haven. The bomb-laden 1993 Nissan Pathfinder Shahzad allegedly parked off Times Square was sold for cash about three weeks ago at a Connecticut shopping mall in a sale arranged through the Craigslist website, CNN reported, citing an unidentified person in law enforcement with knowledge of the investigation. Investigators interviewed the former owner of the sport- utility vehicle, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said. The person was tracked through the car’s vehicle identification number, which was stripped from the dashboard, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said. The number is also typically stamped on parts such as the engine block. Intended Detonator The intended detonator, the police commissioner said, was a can filled with consumer-grade fireworks. The car also held two containers of gasoline and three propane tanks, wired with two clocks, he said. Bloomberg said today at a press conference that “this was an act that was designed to kill innocent civilians and strike fear into the hearts of Americans and I am happy to say that it failed on both counts.” He added that the city “will not tolerate any bias or backlash against Pakistani or Muslim New Yorkers.” The police presence has been increased in the Times Square area. The mayor is founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News parent Bloomberg LP. The case is U.S. v. Shahzad, 10-00928, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York (Manhattan). To contact the reporters on this story: Patricia Hurtado in Manhattan federal court at phurtado@bloomberg.net and; Justin Blum in Washington at jblum4@bloomberg.net

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American Citizen From Pakistan Faces Charges Over Times Square Bomb Plot

May 4, 2010

By Henry Goldman and Mark Tannenbaum May 4 (Bloomberg) — A U.S. citizen of Pakistani origins is due in a New York court today to face charges over the attempted car bombing in Times Square on May 1. Faisal Shahzad will appear in Manhattan federal court on “formal charges,” the U.S. attorney’s office for the southern district of New York said in an e-mailed statement, without being more specific. Agents from the Department of Homeland Security arrested Shahzad at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport last night as he was attempting to board a flight to Dubai, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said at an early morning news conference in Washington. The announcement came less than three days after a botched bombing attempt that led police to evacuate parts of Times Square. “This investigation is ongoing, as are our attempts to gather useful intelligence, and we continue to pursue a number of leads,” Holder said. “But it’s clear that the intent behind this terrorist act was to kill Americans.” Shahzad had recently returned from a five-month trip to Pakistan, where he had a wife, the Associated Press reported citing unidentified law enforcement officials. Pakistan’s Dawn television reported today that the suspect had family links in the port city of Karachi, and visited it last year. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano , in an interview on NBC TV, said it’s “premature to rule in or out” links to international terrorism. Investigators have no evidence that Pakistani Taliban sympathizers were responsible for the attempt, although a group describing itself as such took credit for it, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said. Passengers Removed Dubai-based Emirates Airlines said in an e-mailed statement today that U.S. authorities removed three passengers from a New York to Dubai flight last night and carried out “full security procedures” including the screening of the plane, passengers and baggage. Agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and New York City police detectives arrested Shahzad for “allegedly driving a car bomb into Times Square on the evening of May 1,” the Department of Justice said in a statement today. The 1993 Nissan Pathfinder was sold for cash about three weeks ago at a Connecticut shopping mall in a sale arranged through the Craigslist website, CNN reported, citing an unidentified person in law enforcement with knowledge of the investigation. Investigators interviewed the former owner of the bomb- carrying sport-utility vehicle, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said. The person was tracked through the car’s vehicle identification number, which was stripped from the dashboard, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said. The number is also typically stamped on parts such as the engine block. ‘Intended to Terrorize’ The attempted bombing “was intended to terrorize,” Robert Gibbs , the White House press secretary, said yesterday. Gibbs said today that President Barack Obama was notified about Shahzad’s arrest at around midnight. The intended detonator, Kelly said, was a can filled with consumer-grade fireworks. The car also held two containers of gasoline and three propane tanks, wired with two clocks, the commissioner said. A man described as about 40 years old was seen on a neighborhood surveillance camera as he hurried through Shubert Alley , a pedestrian walkway between West 44th and West 45th Streets, steps from where the explosive-laden car was parked on May 1, he said. The man can be seen on the video removing a dark shirt, revealing a red T-shirt underneath, Kelly said. He placed the outer shirt in a bag and walked from the scene “in a furtive manner,” the commissioner said. Safe as Ever Police also collected images of the vehicle as it traveled along West 45th Street before being left at a curb near several Broadway theaters, the mayor said. “This city is as safe as it’s ever been,” Bloomberg said. “Is it perfectly safe? No, but we always will have events, we’ve had 11 or so in the last eight years, and every time we have responded appropriately. We keep changing our procedures, we keep studying what happens overseas, and we so far have done the right thing.” The police presence has been increased in the Times Square area. Bloomberg urged tourists and New Yorkers to continue visiting the area and “enjoy a Broadway show.” The mayor is founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News parent Bloomberg LP. To contact the reporters on this story: Henry Goldman in New York City Hall at hgoldman@bloomberg.net ; Mark Tannenbaum at mtannen@bloomberg.net .

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Thai Authorities Probe Third Group After Deadly Clash

April 11, 2010

By Supunnabul Suwannakij and Daniel Ten Kate April 12 (Bloomberg) — Thai authorities are investigating whether a third group may be responsible for gun and grenade attacks that sparked the deadliest street clashes between troops and anti-government protesters in 18 years. As many as 21 people were killed and 858 injured when protesters seeking to oust Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva fought with security forces two days ago. Thai stocks slumped today as neither side appeared ready to back down. “Groups of people equipped with weapons, including guns and grenades, infiltrated the protesters,” Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said at a briefing yesterday. “They shot protesters, security forces and other people, which led to the loss of lives.” Protest group leaders yesterday rejected calls to restart negotiations with the government, raising concern the weekend clashes, the worst since 1992 when more than 40 people were killed in four days of fighting, may be repeated. “Neither side wants to give in and there is no trust between them, so you need someone else to come in and build confidence,” said Prudhisan Jumbala, a political science lecturer at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University. “Who that will be remains to be seen.” Protesters yesterday reiterated their demand for Abhisit to dissolve parliament immediately. Abhisit declared a state of emergency in the capital last week after a month of mostly peaceful demonstrations seeking his ouster. “We will not retreat from protest areas,” Nattawut Saikuar, a protest leader, said at a camp in Bangkok’s business district. “We will continue to fight here.” No New Talks The premier’s opponents earlier this month rejected his offer to call an election within nine months, demanding he step down before this week’s Thai New Year holiday. Jatuporn Prompan, one of the group’s leaders, said yesterday they wouldn’t consider restarting negotiations. Many of the red-shirted demonstrators support exiled former premier Thaksin Shinawatra , who won over the poor by giving them cheaper health care and loans before he was ousted in a 2006 coup. The protesters say Abhisit embodies a privileged class of military officers, judges, bureaucrats and royal advisers that sit above the law. “All sides are weak,” said Prudhisan, the political science lecturer. “They can’t actually offer a solution by themselves. The government can’t do it, the reds can’t do it, the army can’t do it, the police can’t do it. Theoretically when you are all weak you have to band together.” Troops and protesters maintained a cease-fire in Bangkok yesterday. Demonstrators are maintaining makeshift camps near Government House, and in the city’s tourist and shopping heartland, where they are occupying a major intersection. Rubber Bullets Soldiers used rubber bullets and tear gas to disperse crowds, and protesters fought back with guns and bombs, government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn said yesterday. Troops were ordered back to their bases to recuperate, he said. The emergency decree, last used a year ago, bans gatherings of more than five people, allows detention without charge and gives soldiers immunity from prosecution. The 21 dead included five soldiers and a Japanese journalist, according to the government’s emergency medical center. The number of injured climbed to 858 as of 6 p.m. local time yesterday. Four soldiers who were captured by protesters during the clashes were released, the Thai News Agency reported. Two of the six soldiers initially held by the opposition group had already been released. The protesters called on the nation’s King Bhumibol Adulyadej to intervene in the crisis to prevent further deaths, Agence France-Presse reported, citing protest leader Jatuporn Prompan. While the king has no formal political role, he is seen as a unifying figure. Stocks Fall The month-long conflict is starting to deter investors from Thailand, where the baht and the nation’s benchmark stock index had been trading close to their highest levels in 22 months. The key SET Index fell 3.3 percent as of 10:07 a.m. local time, heading for its biggest three-day decline since October. “The market will fall, responding negatively to the violence,” Pichai Lertsupongkit , vice president at Thanachart Securities, said by phone. “Foreign funds will probably unwind their positions to reduce risk.” Overseas investors sold more Thai stocks than they bought for the first time in more than six weeks on April 8. They bought a net 58.9 billion baht of shares during the 31-day period ending April 7, the longest stretch since February 2005, according to the Stock Exchange of Thailand’s data. The stock market will be closed starting tomorrow for the three-day Thai New Year holiday. The Finance Ministry on March 29 raised its economic growth forecast for this year to as much as 5 percent, citing better- than-expected export gains and local consumption. “If the situation can be resolved in a short time, the market fall is likely to be limited,” Pichai said. To contact the reporters on this story: Supunnabul Suwannakij in Bangkok at ssuwannakij@bloomberg.net ; Daniel Ten Kate in Bangkok at dtenkate@bloomberg.net

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