Friday, August 2, 2013

Bump Seen in Substance Abuse Treatment During ... - Health.com

FRIDAY, Aug. 2 (HealthDay News) ? There was a slight rise in the percentage of pregnant women entering substance abuse treatment programs between 2000 and 2010 in the United States. But the number of those entering treatment for alcohol use declined during that time, according to a federal government report.

The admission rates for the women, aged 15 to 44, rose from 4.4 percent in 2000 to 4.8 percent in 2010, the investigators found. At the same time, the number of pregnant women entering treatment for alcohol use (with or without drug use) fell from 46.6 percent to 34.8 percent.

However, the percentage of pregnant women receiving treatment for drug use (without alcohol use) rose from just over 51 percent to nearly 64 percent, according to the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) report.

There were similar trends among non-pregnant women in the same age group, the researchers noted.

?Any kind of substance use by pregnant women can result in miscarriage, premature birth or a variety of behavioral and cognitive problems in the children they carry,? SAMHSA administrator Pamela Hyde said in an agency news release.

?Pregnant women must have access to prevention, support and recovery services that meet their specialized needs. These include community programs for both pregnant and postpartum women that can help ensure their full recovery and better lives for them and their children,? she added.

SAMHSA has a Services Grant Program for Residential Treatment for Pregnant and Postpartum Women, Hyde explained, which promotes the availability of substance abuse treatment, prevention and recovery support programs for these low-income women and their young children.

The grant program is specifically focused on meeting the needs of the women, but also improving the health and well-being of their family members and others who are close to them, Hyde pointed out in the news release.

More information

The March of Dimes has more about the dangers of smoking, alcohol and drugs during pregnancy.

Source: http://news.health.com/2013/08/02/bump-seen-in-substance-abuse-treatment-during-pregnancy/

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Selena Gomez: Spotted at Hooters!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/08/selena-gomez-spotted-at-hooters/

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Michael Dell closes in on prize with sweeter $25 billion deal

By Greg Roumeliotis and Eileen O'Grady

NEW YORK/ROUND ROCK, Texas (Reuters) - Dell Inc and Chief Executive Michael Dell clinched a new $25 billion deal on Friday, boosting the bid and offering a special dividend in hopes of ending months of wrangling with opponents of the founder's proposed buyout of the world's No. 3 PC maker.

The new agreement includes a special dividend of 13 cents per share on top of a 10-cent increase in the sale price to $13.75 per share. In return, Michael Dell and his private equity partner Silver Lake convinced the company's special committee to agree to change the voting rules so that abstentions no longer count as opposing votes, a big boost for their camp.

Dell shares rose after the announcement. But activist investor Carl Icahn, who has amassed an 8.7 percent stake in Dell and has opposed the buyout offer as too low, vowed to keep fighting.

"We are pleased today to have won yet another battle, but the war regarding Dell is far from over," Icahn said in a Friday statement. "We are not satisfied. We believe that an increase of a mere 13 cents is an insult to shareholders."

Icahn has sued the tech company in a Delaware court, trying to block the changes to the voting rules.

Dell shares were up 5 percent at $13.61 in afternoon trading, a sign of increasing optimism that the deal will go through. But not everyone was convinced.

"We do not believe this battle is over yet, especially given yesterday's complaint filed by Carl Icahn," said Topeka Capital's Brian White.

The battle over Dell has raged for months, adding more uncertainty about a company already shrinking along with a rapidly declining PC market. Dell is trying to transform itself into an IBM-like enterprise computing firm.

Michael Dell and Silver Lake say a painful restructuring can best be performed as a private company, away from market scrutiny. Their new deal with the special committee, and a delay in the voting date to September 12, boost the buyout consortium in several ways.

The CEO is effectively agreeing to bankroll the special dividend, a source close to the matter told Reuters.

Abstentions under the previous voting system counted as "no" votes. With an estimated quarter of eligible shares not having been voted either way, that proved a substantial hurdle to overcome. Under the new deal announced Friday, shares that are not voted will be excluded from the tally.

A change in the record date by more than two months is also seen as enfranchising so-called arbitrage investors - hedge funds that bought Dell stock more recently to earn a few cents per share and would thus be more likely support the buyout.

MACHINATIONS

A vote on the buyout has been postponed now three times. The record date, which determines which shareholders are entitled to vote, will be reset to August 13 from June 3.

Under the deal, Dell shareholders will also be entitled to three regular quarterly dividends of 8 cents per share totaling 24 cents, since the first deal with Michael Dell and private equity partner Silver Lake was announced on February 5.

Michael Dell, who started the company in 1984 out of his college dorm room, agreed to swallow a hit to get the deal done, said the source close to the matter.

The special dividend of 13 cents per share will be funded with excess equity resulting from his rolling over his shares in the deal at a lower price, subsidizing Silver Lake's returns, according to the source.

He had previously agreed to roll over his shares at $13.36 per share. Together with the 10 cent per share increase in the buyout offer, this results in an increase in the original $24.4 billion bid by about $350 million to nearly $24.8 billion.

"If you have to go through these machinations to get these things through, it frankly is an excellent demonstration of why management buyouts are so problematic," said Charles Elson, director of the John L. Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware.

Although there is no regulatory or legal requirement for the buyout vote tally to include shares that are not voted, changing the rules of the game at this stage will give more ammunition to shareholders challenging the deal in court, legal experts said.

ICAHN: WILD CARD?

Icahn and Southeastern Asset Management intend to contest the new deal, pressing on with their lawsuit.

Last month, the two investors sweetened their share buyback proposal by adding warrants they say would increase the value of their offer to a range of $15.50 to $18 per share from $14 per share. Under their plan, Dell would remain a public company.

Icahn has campaigned hard to get Dell to set a date for an annual shareholder meeting so he could put up his own slate of company directors and implement his proposal.

But Dell refused to give him that chance. It said on Friday the annual meeting would be held on October 17, long after the buyout vote is held.

Another person familiar with the matter said shareholders could challenge the date of the annual meeting in court because it did not comply with rules that dictate it should be held within 13 months of Dell's previous annual meeting, which was held in July 2012.

But given that a new record date has been set for August 13 the special committee would argue that a court cannot ask the company to hold the annual meeting much earlier than October 17, the person added.

Dell's special committee chairman Alex Mandl on Friday explained the company's decision to change the voting standard.

"The original voting standard was set at a time when the decision before the shareholders was between a going-private transaction and a continuation of the status quo," Mandl said in a statement.

"Since then, the nature of the choice facing shareholders has changed because of the emergence of an alternative proposal by certain stockholders. In the context of the current decision, the committee does not believe it is appropriate to count shares that have not been voted as having been voted in support of any particular alternative."

Dell also agreed on Friday to reduce from $450 million to $180 million a break-up fee it would have to pay if the deal with Michael Dell and Silver Lake was terminated, and if within a year it enters into another transaction that does not lead to any party being a majority shareholder.

(Additional reporting by Soyoung Kim, Ross Kerber and Michael Erman in New York, Poornima Gupta in San Franscisco, and Sruthi Ramakrishnan in Bangalore, editing by Andre Grenon, Edwin Chan and David Gregorio)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dell-shareholders-convene-third-time-buyout-battle-escalates-040142852.html

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5 smart reactions to the Bradley Manning verdict

The polarizing secret-spiller faces up to 136 years in prison after being found guilty of 20 crimes. What does it mean for transparency, Obama, and journalism?

This week, a military judge found Pfc. Bradley Manning guilty of 20 crimes, including several violations of the Espionage Act, for his role in leaking hundreds of thousands of classified documents to WikiLeaks. Manning was acquitted on the most serious charge, aiding the enemy, which means he will avoid a sentence of life in prison without parole. He could still, however, face up to 136 years in prison.

The case has sharply divided the country. Some people argue that Manning endangered lives by leaking classified information about the U.S. military during wartime. His proponents insist that Manning performed a valuable public service by shedding light on the government's secret actions, likening him to Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked the Pentagon Papers during the Vietnam war.

Here are some of the smartest takes, from both sides, on the wider implications of the Manning verdict.

Manning's acquittal on aiding the enemy charges was a small victory for freedom of the press, argues The New Yorker's Amy Davidson:

The charge was always a stretch; the best precedent the government could come up with was a hundred and fifty years old, a case that arose in the context of the Union occupation of the Confederate-leaning city of Alexandria. As I wrote earlier, the dubious legal logic behind the charge was that giving information to a non-enemy reporter that an undesirable person might eventually read, and be glad to see, amounted to being in league with the enemy ? something that could apply to the work of any number of investigative reporters. (The prosecution acknowledged that its arguments applied as much to the Times as to WikiLeaks.) There are necessary secrets; it is always the case, in a functioning democracy, that the government also tries to declare unnecessary ones, out of embarrassment or expediency, and that the press tries to keep it from doing so. The Obama Administration has been disrupting that balance with a series of leak investigations. The acquittal was a small push back. [The New Yorker]

But the case still has hugely negative implications for journalism and WikiLeaks, writes The Guardian's Dan Gilmor:

By finding Manning guilty of five counts of espionage, the judge endorsed the government's other radical theories, and left the journalism organization that initially passed along the leaks to the public, WikiLeaks, no less vulnerable than it had been before the case started. Anyone who thinks Julian Assange isn't still a target of the U.S. government hasn't been paying attention; if the U.S. can pry him loose from Ecuador's embassy in London and extradite him, you can be certain that he'll face charges, too, and the Manning verdict will be vital to that case ? The overwhelmingly torpid coverage of this trial by traditional media has been yet another scandal for the legacy press, which still can't seem to wrap its collective brain around the importance of the case, and especially its wider context. National security journalist Jeremy Scahill summed it up after the verdict when he told Democracy Now: "We're in a moment when journalism is being criminalized." [The Guardian]

The verdict is bad news for Edward Snowden, writes Foreign Policy's Elias Groll, and makes his decision to seek asylum abroad look "all the more prescient":

In explaining his decision to flee the United States, Snowden has explained that the treatment of Manning, who has been held in solitary confinement and, on several occasions, stripped of his clothing, served as an example of the treatment he was likely to face for leaking sensitive National Security Agency documents. Now Snowden has seen Manning not only roughed up by his military captors but also convicted under the full weight of espionage charges ? Like Manning, Snowden argues that his decision to put classified documents in the public domain was done out of a desire to expose wrongdoing at the highest level of the government. But as Tuesday's verdict in the Manning trial illustrates, that argument is no defense in the face of espionage charges, which the Obama administration has relied on heavily in its efforts to crack down on national security leaks. For the administration's critics, the idea that providing information to journalists amounts to espionage is ludicrous on its face. But as the Manning verdict shows, it's a line of reasoning that holds up well in a court room. [Foreign Policy]

In the end, the presiding judge, Colonel Denise Lind, made the right call, says Paul M. Barrett of Bloomberg Businessweek:

The Manning verdict bears the strong imprint of common sense. Lind rejected the government's contention that, by dint of his training in intelligence, Manning knew his disclosures of documents and videos related to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan would likely come to the attention of al Qaeda. On the other hand, Lind found that Manning should have known that his actions could harm the U.S., even if that was not his goal ? The judge intended to deter future Bradley Mannings from breaking the law and taking it upon themselves to decide which military secrets deserve exposure. At the same time, Lind made an implicit distinction between a leaker and a direct instrument of the nation's enemies. In so doing, she ensured that Manning's admitted misconduct will be punished, without making him into more of the martyr his supporters see him as. [Bloomberg Businessweek]

But the Obama administration's unprecedented use of the Espionage Act remains hugely problematic, writes the editorial board of The New York Times:

There is no question that Private Manning broke laws. In February he pleaded guilty to 10 of the less serious charges against him, which exposed him to up to 20 years in prison. But prosecutors continued to press the more serious charges, which included violations of the Espionage Act, a 1917 law that has become the Obama administration's hobbyhorse to go after government workers whose actions look nothing like spying. Under President Obama, the government has brought espionage charges more than twice as often under that particular law as all previous administrations combined ... Americans accept that material must be classified in the interest of national security. But that acceptance is severely tested when the government classifies more than 92 million documents in a year. [The New York Times]

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/5-smart-reactions-bradley-manning-verdict-111500016.html

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U.S. SEC tightens client rules for broker - dealers

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The top U.S. securities regulator on Wednesday set new rules to protect clients with cash or securities at securities brokers, requiring more disclosure and safeguards from firms including some of Wall Street's largest.

The Securities and Exchange Commission said the thousands of brokerage firms will need to file a range of new reports with regulators when holding client assets on custody. Companies affected include such names as Goldman Sachs , JP Morgan and Bank of America .

"Investors need to feel confident that their money is safe when it's being held by their broker-dealers," Mary Jo White, Chair of the SEC, said in a statement.

The SEC also amended a set of existing rules for securities brokerages, also known as broker-dealers, to better protect client money including changes to how capital is calculated and documentation and notification requirements.

The agency voted unanimously for these amendments, but was split 3-2 over the new protection rules.

The amendments to the financial responsibility rules for broker-dealers were first proposed in 2007, and the SEC had re-opened the public comment period last year.

Smaller brokerage firms in the past have complained that the extra regulatory burden the SEC rules would impose on them would mean higher costs, asking for delays.

Broker-dealers will be required to begin filing new quarterly reports by the end of 2013, while the requirement to file annual reports with the SEC will be effective as of June 1, 2014, the agency said.

(Reporting by Douwe Miedema; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and David Gregorio)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-sec-amends-responsibility-rules-broker-dealers-181058839.html

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Fed keeps stimulus going, leaves rates unchanged

Economy

14 hours ago

A general view of the U.S. Federal Reserve building as the morning sky breaks over Washington, July 31, 2013.

JONATHAN ERNST / Reuters

A general view of the U.S. Federal Reserve building as the morning sky breaks over Washington, July 31, 2013.

Steady as she goes. The Federal Reserve will keep interest rates unchanged and keep buying $85 billion in bonds every month while the economy keeps improving at a "modest" pace, the central bank said Wednesday.

Amid a backdrop of gradually improving economic data and concerns of asset price inflation, the Fed provided no further clues after its policy meeting this week that it will be easing back the throttle on easy money.

No changes are imminent to interest rate, but the $85 billion monthly money-printing program known as quantitative easing will be trimmed back only if the data points continue to improve.

The market has been hotly anticipating the next move in Fed policy, with tapering of asset purchases likely to begin in September.

After the decision came down, stocks added to previous narrow gains while bond yields moved little.

In all, the Fed exacted few changes to the language from its last meeting, leaving open the possibility that it could add or subtract from the QE purchases depending on conditions.

What was missing from this month was the post-meeting news conference from Chairman Ben Bernanke.

The central bank chief rattled markets in May when he suggested that QE likely would end in 2014.

Markets took the statement to mean that the Fed also would begin to raise interest rates sooner than expected. A cadre of Fed officials followed that meeting with public statements aimed at quelling fears that money tightening was coming, and the massive stock market rally of 2013 resumed.

By CNBC's Jeff Cox. Follow him @JeffCoxCNBCcom on Twitter.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663286/s/2f65965e/sc/2/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Cfed0Ekeeps0Estimulus0Egoing0Eleaves0Erates0Eunchanged0E6C10A80A9572/story01.htm

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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Leon Washington wants to go beyond special teams for Patriots

Leon Washington is ready to do more than just return kicks and punts for the New England Patriots.

But if that?s all the free agent signee gets to do for his new team, he sounds ready to live with it.

?Ever since I was a rookie, I was always a team player,? Washington said Sunday, after the team?s first full-pads practice. ?That?s been my main focus. Knowing I could so many different things well -- running the ball, catching the ball, returning kicks, (I) even made tackles (on special teams) sometimes in my career.

?That?s the same approach I have here - coming in, helping the team out the best way I can.?

Washington, now 31, debuted with the New York Jets and played the last three seasons with Seattle. A 98-yard kick return for a touchdown last year gave him eight kick return TDs in his seven-year career, tying him with Josh Cribbs for the NFL record.

With Danny Woodhead leaving the Patriots for San Diego, there?s an opening for an all-purpose third-down back in New England. Shane Vereen will likely get most of that work and there?s a chance Washington won?t get much time.

?He?s played back there before but not a lot recently with the Seahawks,? Belichick said. ?We?ll put him in our system, teach him the things that he needs to learn at that position, evaluate him with the other players.?

Washington?s offensive plays indeed dwindled the last two years. Asked if that was disappointing, though, he said, ?No, not really.

?Obviously, I?m a competitor and want to be on the football field, want to be out there and help the team out as much as I can. But not really - we won a bunch of games when I was in Seattle, being a team player is the most important thing.?

He said he came to New England for the ?obvious? reasons.

?You watch this organization from afar, you see how well they do things here,? he said. ?It?s a winning organization. They believe in winning, they believe in competing.

?The most important thing that I love, that I?ve seen so far, is everybody is all about the team. Everybody is going to do whatever they do to help the team win. That?s impressive, watching it from afar. Everything when they guys come out and compete, hear them talking to the media, hear guys talking in the weight room, everything is all about the team.?

Belichick said the first day in pads is the start of the evaluation process of the bigger players on the team - the tacklers and blockers.

?It feels great,? said veteran guard Logan Mankins, who spent much of his morning dealing with Vince Wilfork on the other side of the line. ?Pretty tired right now but it?s always nice to start playing real football - to see where you?re at where you need to go.?

Wilfork stripped Stevan Ridley of the ball in a goal-line situation, one of two fumbles by Ridley on the day. (Jerod Mayo snared the other one out of the air), which led to some extra running for the back.

Notes

Tim Tebow was a bit better on Day 3 - hardly perfect, but better -- connecting on a pair of long touchdown passes. . Tom Brady had a pass intercepted by Kyle Arrington. . Rookie wide receiver Aaron Dobson had another strong day and fellow rookie Josh Boyce made his first impression. . Actor Robert Duvall, who has visited the Whitey Bulger murder trial, was at camp chatting with New England owner Robert Kraft. Also spotted: former Pats Troy Brown and Christian Fouria. . Belichick said defensive end Armond Armstead is on the non-football illness list for something not related to previous heart problems. . Linebacker Dane Fletcher, who missed all last season with a knee injury, is on the field. ?I don?t think he?s had any physical limitations to what we?ve done,? Belichick said. . The quarterbacks have video cameras attached to their helmets, another evaluation tool. ?We?ll take a look at it and see what we get out of it,? Belichick said. . Former linebacker Tedy Bruschi and retiring broadcaster Gil Santos will enter the team?s Hall of Fame before Monday night?s practice.

Source: http://www.norwichbulletin.com/sports/x1806129947/Leon-Washington-wants-to-go-beyond-special-teams-for-Patriots?rssfeed=true

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Friday, July 26, 2013

Glaxo warns China corruption scandal will hit business

By Ben Hirschler

LONDON (Reuters) - A "shameful" corruption scandal in China will inevitably impact GlaxoSmithKline's business, the British drugmaker's chief executive said on Wednesday, adding he was ready to go to Beijing "at the right moment."

In his first public comments since the crisis broke a fortnight ago, Andrew Witty said GSK would set up an independent review to investigate the "deeply disappointing" allegations.

GSK believes the alleged corruption involved senior Chinese staff working around its systems to potentially defraud the company as well as cheating the Chinese healthcare system, adding that head office had had no knowledge of the situation.

"The alleged activities are not what we expect of our people and are totally contrary to our values," Witty told reporters as he presented the company's second-quarter results.

"Clearly, we are likely to see some impact to our performance in China as a result of the current investigation, but it is too early to quantify the extent of this."

GSK's reputation has been damaged and its management team in China left in disarray by Chinese police allegations that it funneled up to 3 billion yuan ($489 million) to travel agencies to facilitate bribes to doctors and officials.

China's official news agency Xinhua suggested on Wednesday that more foreign and local pharmaceutical firms could soon be implicated in the corruption scandal sweeping the industry.

GSK has admitted that some Chinese executives appeared to have broken the law and says it plans to change its business model to lower the cost of medicines in the country.

Witty said this could include adopting more tiered pricing of medicines in China - an approach designed to make drugs more affordable in poorer countries. It is a model that GSK has used in other developing regions, including Africa.

Despite the problems, Witty stressed he remained committed to China and saw it as a key country for further investments.

China is an important growth market for GSK and other large drugmakers, which are relying on the middle classes in emerging markets to buy more of their products as sales in Western countries falter due to patent losses and government cutbacks.

GSK's sales in China, where it employs more than 7,000, rose 14 percent in the second quarter to 212 million pounds ($326 million) - 3.2 percent of the group total.

GSK supplies products such as vaccines in China, as well as drugs for lung disease and cancer.

Citigroup analyst Andrew Baum said the bribery allegations raised questions over GSK's internal compliance procedures but the financial impact was likely to be limited.

The bribery scandal suggests business in China is going to get tougher, especially if Beijing succeeds in driving down the premium prices enjoyed by Western firms.

There is also potential for regulators in the United States and Britain to prosecute GSK under bribery laws, although Witty said investigations appeared to be limited to China so far.

Asked whether he should lose his bonus in the light of a scandal, Witty said: "That is really a matter for the board to consider at the right time."

WORLDWIDE SALES UP 2 PERCENT

In the latest quarter, GSK's worldwide sales rose a modest 2 percent to 6.62 billion pounds, generating core earnings per share (EPS) up 1 percent at 26.3 pence.

That was marginally better than the market had expected, given that Britain's biggest drugmaker has been struggling to grow in recent quarters due to loss of patent protection on some of its medicines and falling prices in austerity-hit Europe.

Analysts, on average, had forecast sales of 6.60 billion pounds and core EPS, which excludes certain items, of 26.2p, according to Thomson Reuters.

The company reiterated that it expected sales growth for the year to be around 1 percent in local currency terms, with EPS rising by between 3 and 4 percent. It said there had been encouraging progress with its pipeline of new drugs but austerity pressures in Europe were likely to continue.

It also repeated that it planned to buy back between 1 billion and 2 billion pounds of shares in 2013.

GSK has been investing heavily in China in recent years and now has five factories and a research center in the country.

Ensuring compliance with global standards, however, has not been easy. Sources familiar with the matter have said GSK conducts up to 20 internal audits of its Chinese operations each year, many of which find problems.

The head of GSK's research center in China was sacked in June due to misrepresentation of data in a scientific study and two years earlier deficiencies were identified at the Shanghai facility, which GSK says have now been fixed.

(Additional reporting by Kate Kelland, editing by Jane Barrett and Jane Merriman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/glaxosmithkline-sees-hit-china-corruption-scandal-111203674.html

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Thursday, July 25, 2013

The Daily Caller advises Edward Snowden about his little asylum problem

Poor Edward Snowden seems to be having a hard time. Ever since he fled the United States with a bunch of top-secret information about what appears to be a ridiculously invasive, secret surveillance system run by the government, he?s had trouble finding a place to settle down.

After a brief stop in Hong Kong, Snowden has been allegedly holed up for a long time in the transit zone of Moscow?s Sheremetyevo International Airport. He is apparently seeking asylum in Russia as well as number of other countries including Venezuela, Bolivia and Nicaragua. But things are slow-going.

The Daily Caller wants to help. Here are 11 places where the 30-year-old American fugitive should consider calling home. It?d be great if he could get permission, of course, but TheDC recommends these locales even if he has to immigrate illegally. They?re that good.

?

NorthKorea NorthKorea

Pyongyang, North Korea is the largest city and the capital of the basket case of a communist state. Pro: Dennis Rodman called Kim Jong Un a ?friend for life.? If Rodman can be friends with Un, so can Snowden. Con: Arbitrary arrest and long-term detention are the norm in North Korea. Also, TheDC hears that massive spying could be the norm. (Photo: AFP/Getty Images)

?

Chernobyl Chernobyl

In April 1986, a catastrophic nuclear accident occurred in Chernobyl, Ukraine at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. Pro: The city is now abandoned, so Snowden can roam more or less freely. Con: Lots of radiation. ?(Photo: AFP/Getty Images/Viktor Drachev)

BourneSupremacy BourneSupremacy

In The Bourne Supremacy (2004), Jason Bourne and his new girlfriend hid out among the hippie tourists in Goa, India. Matt Damon plays Bourne, of course, and shows strangely awful running form while sprinting down a beach in the Indian state. Pro: Jason Bourne was successful hiding out in Goa. Con: He wasn?t successful for very long. (Photo: Bourne Supremacy Universal Studios 2004 YouTube screenshot)

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KhartoumSnowden KhartoumSnowden

Khartoum, Sudan?is the capital and second largest city of the Republic of Sudan. Pro: Khartoum provides asylum for scores of South Sudanese and Darfuri refugees escaping the violence of a civil war in the country and the Darfur Conflict. Con: The whole country, including Khartoum, is at least as dangerous as any American prison.?(Photo: AFP/Getty Images/Ashraf Shazly)

?

Anarctica Anarctica

Antarctica?is the earth?s southernmost continent is the earth?s coldest, driest and windiest continent. No one lives there on a permanent basis.?Pro:?Police are sparse and Antarctica has no government, though various countries claim sovereignty in certain regions. Con: Antarctica is the earth?s southernmost continent is the earth?s coldest, driest and windiest continent. No one lives there on a permanent basis. (Photo: AFP/Getty Images/Vilem Bischof)

Pakistan tribal area Banaras Khan AFP Getty Images Pakistan tribal area Banaras Khan AFP Getty Images

Northwestern Pakistan is an essentially lawless area home to perpetual, ongoing armed conflict involving militant groups such as al-Qaeda. Pro: The mountainous area of Waziristan?may have some vacant hideouts for Snowden. Con: A U.S. drone might hit him.?(Photo: AFP/Getty Images/Banaras Khan)

?

Harare Zimbabwe Harare Zimbabwe

Harare, Zimbabwe is Zimbabwe?s largest city and its capital. Pro: Robert Mugabe, the country?s notorious president, might take Snowden under his wing. Con: Hyper-inflation was been a problem and the Economist Intelligence Unit?s livability poll has called Harare the toughest city to live in. Also, Mugabe might take Snowden under his wing. (Photo: AFP/Getty Images/Jekesai Njikizana)

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Qusayr Jospeh Eid Qusayr Jospeh Eid

Qusayr, Syria is a hotspot in the very hot civil war bedeviling Syria between the Ba?ath Party government and rebel groups. The Syrian rebels groups may soon receive above-board American military support. Pro: There is so much chaos in Syria that the main concern for Syrians could not possibly be anything involving Edward Snowden. Con: A guy like Snowden is unlikely to last until lunchtime in Qusayr or anywhere in Syria right now. (Photo: AFP/Getty Images/Jospeh Eid)

Losangeles Losangeles

Los Angeles, California is most known for his notorious Hollywood stars, landmarks and illegal-immigrant taco trucks. Pro: From Snoop Lion to Meg Ryan, aliases are a normal thing in Los Angeles. So, working on a taco cart with illegal immigrants and the name Carlos Peligroso won?t raise that much suspicion. Con:?Snowden would have subject himself to the U.S. criminal justice system, which may not end well.?(Photo:?Flickr/skampy)

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Ashgabat Ashgabat

Ashgabat, Turkmenistan is is the capital and largest city of Turkmenistan, a country in Central Asia. Pro: Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow, one of the world?s best crazy dictators, could take a shine to Snowden. Con: Gurbanguly ?? that?s what you are supposed to call him ?? could crazily change his mind.?(Photo: Getty Images)

OahuSnowden OahuSnowden

Waipahu, Hawaii is a city near Pearl Harbor on the island of Oahu. It?s the last place Snowden lived before he bolted to Hong Kong. Pro: Who would look there? When Whittaker Chambers gave up spying for the Soviets in 1938 or so, he brilliantly hid out from his Soviet handlers in Baltimore, where he had lived, because he figured that?s the last place they?d look. Con: Snowden would subject himself to the jurisdiction of the United States criminal system, which may not end well. (Photo: Getty Images)
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4 Ways Amnesty is So Not Dead

Journalist imprisoned at Obama's insistence released

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/daily-caller-advises-edward-snowden-little-asylum-problem-010231888.html

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

Calipari uses Twitter to share feelings about Wiltjer?s transfer

By LARRY VAUGHT

How did Kentucky coach John Calipari react to Kyle Wiltjer?s transfer to Gonzaga today?

While UK has issued no official statement, Calipari took to Twitter to share his feelings:

? I?m saddened that @kwiltjt is leaving the program, but if he thinks it?s in his best interest to go somewhere else, I support his decision.

? Here is what I sent Kyle after he told me of his final decision: ?All?s good. Mrs. Cal & I are sad and disappointed but accept your decision

? ?Thank you for helping us win a national title and working so hard for me the last two years. Go prove me right! You can play!!

? ?I will be here for you if you need me. Love you, kid.? @kwiltj will always be a part of the #BBN.

Source: http://vaughtsviews.com/calipari-uses-twitter-to-share-feelings-about-wiltjers-transfer/

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Russian opposition leader Navalny released

KIROV, Russia (AP) ? A Russian court Friday freed charismatic opposition leader Alexei Navalny from custody less than 24 hours after he was convicted of embezzlement, a release he attributed to protests over a five-year prison sentence seen by supporters as a blatantly political attempt to silence the foe of President Vladimir Putin.

Prosecutors had requested that the Moscow mayoral candidate be let go pending appeal so that he could participate in the race in the fall. The move was seen as an attempt to soothe public anger and lend legitimacy to a vote widely expected to be won by a Kremlin-backed incumbent.

The popular blogger who has exposed high-level corruption and mocked the Kremlin would not immediately say if he would stay in the race, expressing resentment over what he characterized as political manipulation.

After the decision, he emerged from the caged-off defendants' section of the courtroom. He hugged his wife, and thanked the several thousand supporters who had protested his conviction on Manezhnaya Square next to the Kremlin, clapping hands and chanting "Freedom!" and "Putin is a thief!"

Dressed in a black T-shirt and jeans, he said his release was a result of Thursday's protests. He claimed his conviction and sentence "had been vetted by the presidential administration ... but when people came out on Manezhnaya, they rushed to go back on that decision."

Judge Ignatiy Embasinov supported the release, saying that Navalny's incarceration would "prevent him from exercising his rights of being elected," to cheers from Navalny's supporters.

The release comes with the condition that Navalny not travel outside Moscow and extends until appeals of his conviction are completed.

Navalny's lawyer Olga Mikhailova described Friday's ruling as unprecedented in Russia. Outside the court, Navalny was greeted by supporters, one of them offering him blini ? Russian pancakes ? a sarcastic play on the name of the judge who sentenced him, Sergei Blinov.

Navalny said it's "impossible to predict" whether Friday's decision could raise the chances of his acquittal on appeal. He also said he has not yet decided whether to continue his mayoral campaign.

"I'm not some kitten or a puppy that can be thrown out of election, say, 'you're not running' and later say 'yes, let's get him back in.' I will get back to Moscow and we will talk it over with my election headquarters," he said.

Presentation of the appeal and the decision by the court for the Kirov region took little more than an hour, a sharp contrast to the droning 3 ?-hour verdict reading and sentencing in a lower court the previous day.

That harsh ruling provoked immediate anger. The U.S. and EU both criticized the ruling within hours, arguing that the case appeared to be politically motivated.

The protest rally briefly blocked traffic on a busy Moscow street, as demonstrators shouted "This city is ours!" Police rounded up several dozen demonstrators, but didn't move to disperse the rally that went on for several hours.

Navalny rose to prominence among the opposition during a series of massive protests in Moscow against Putin's re-election to a third presidential term in March 2012.

He first earned notice by blogging about his investigations into corruption at state-owned companies where he owned shares, reaching hundreds of thousands of people. He and his team of lawyers and activists have plumbed property registers abroad to identify top officials and lawmakers who own undeclared foreign assets and hold foreign citizenship.

Navalny's blog quickly became an Internet sensation not only because of his exposures but because of its engaging illustrations, funny images and witty catchphrases. It was Navalny who first called the dominant United Russia party "the party of crooks and thieves," a phrase that still dogs Kremlin loyalists.

The opposition leader's investigations targeted a wide circle of Putin loyalists ? from members of Parliament to state bankers ? threatening to discredit the system of governance he has built.

___

Associated Press writer Jim Heintz in Moscow contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russian-opposition-leader-navalny-released-072257210.html

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Environment May Affect Development of Language (Voice Of America)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/320303244?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

Facebook mobile users up 20 percent in US and UK

7 hours ago

Facebook on smartphone

Reuters file

Facebook has been working hard to convince advertisers about its reach on mobile phones.

The number of users accessing Facebook via their mobile phones in June jumped around 20 percent in the United States and Britain, Facebook said Wednesday, touting its appeal for brands trying to reach consumers during the summer months.

Created in a Harvard dorm room in 2004, the world's largest social network has moved to reposition its business for a world in which consumers' primarily access the Internet via small-screened smartphones rather than computers.

The strategy has started to pay off, with the group's results for the first three months of the year showing mobile advertising revenue gaining momentum and accounting for 30 percent of Facebook's overall ad revenue in the first quarter.

On Thursday, the group said its mobile monthly active users had increased by 18 percent in the United States and by 22 percent in Britain in June compared with the previous year, as brands seek different ways to reach consumers who are often on holiday and not interacting with their usual media.

"We see this as a fantastic opportunity with empirical evidence of people staying engaged on mobile phones and using Facebook," James Quarles, regional director for Britain and Southern Europe, said.

"As people are away and on holiday, it provides a different opportunity for brands to think differently about Facebook."

Though advertisers are keen to harness the boom in mobile phones, few have perfected the art of using mobile devices to target adverts to consumers, with a discrepancy remaining between the amount of time consumers spend on their mobile devices and the advertising dollars companies spend there.

Facebook is seen as one of the most likely ways for mobile advertising to succeed.

"When people are that engaged, checking their Facebook 14 times a day, if advertisers can deliver the right message to the right audience you can really see some business impact," Quarles said.

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2ecedd6a/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cfacebook0Emobile0Eusers0E20A0Epercent0Eus0Euk0E6C10A66870A6/story01.htm

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Friday, July 12, 2013

Bell Canada to redeem Series M-20 debentures due 2014

Bell Canada has announced it will redeem on 9 August 2013, prior to maturity, all of its outstanding CAD 1 billion principal amount of 4.85 percent Debentures, Series M-20, due 30 June 2014. The Series M-20 Debentures will be redeemed at a price equal to CAD 1,027.874 per CAD 1,000 principal amount of debentures plus CAD 5.315 for accrued and unpaid interest up to, but excluding, the date of redemption.

Source: http://www.telecompaper.com/news/bell-canada-to-redeem-series-m-20-debentures-due-2014--954602

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Studies: Cyberspying targeted S. Korea, U.S. military



By Martha Mendoza & Youkyung Lee


Associated Press

POSTED:

ASSOCIATED PRESS

A customer sat in a branch of Shinhan Bank in Seoul after the bank's computer networks was paralyzed on March 20.
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SEOUL? The hackers who knocked out tens of thousands of South Korean computers simultaneously this year are out to do far more than erase hard drives, cybersecurity firms say: They also are trying to steal South Korean and U.S. military secrets with a malicious set of codes they've been sending through the Internet for years.

The identities of the hackers, and the value of any information they have acquired, are not known to U.S. and South Korean researchers who have studied line after line of computer code. But they do not dispute South Korean claims that North Korea is responsible, and other experts say the links to military spying add fuel to Seoul's allegations.

Researchers at Santa Clara, California-based McAfee Labs said the malware was designed to find and upload information referring to U.S. forces in South Korea, joint exercises or even the word "secret."

McAfee said versions of the malware have infected many websites in an ongoing attack that it calls Operation Troy because the code is peppered with references to the ancient city. McAfee said that in 2009, malware was implanted into a social media website used by military personnel in South Korea.

"This goes deeper than anyone had understood to date, and it's not just attacks: It's military espionage," said Ryan Sherstobitoff, a senior threat researcher at McAfee who gave The Associated Press a report that the company is releasing later this week. He analyzed code samples shared by U.S. government partners and private customers.

McAfee found versions of the keyword-searching malware dating to 2009. A South Korean cybersecurity researcher, Simon Choi, found versions of the code as early as 2007, with keyword-searching capabilities added in 2008. It was made by the same people who have also launched prior cyberattacks in South Korea over the last several years, Choi said.

Versions of the code may still be trying to glean military secrets from infected computers. Sherstobitoff said the same coded fingerprints were found on an attack June 25 ? the anniversary of the start of the 1950-53 Korean War ? in which websites for South Korea's president and prime minister were attacked. A day later the Pentagon said it was investigating reports that personal information about thousands of U.S. troops in South Korea had been posted online.

Sherstobitoff began his investigation after the March 20 cyberattack, known as the Dark Seoul Incident. It wiped clean tens of thousands of hard drives, including those belonging to three television networks and three banks in South Korea, disabling ATMs and other bank services. South Korea says no military computers were affected by Dark Seoul.

The code used in the shutdown is different from that used to hunt for military secrets, but they share so many characteristics that Sherstobitoff and Choi believe they were made by the same people.

Sherstobitoff said those responsible for the spying had infected computers by "spear phishing" ? targeted attacks that trick users into giving up sensitive information by posing as a trusted entity. The hackers hijacked about a dozen obscure Korean-language religious, social and shopping websites to make it easier to pull secrets from infected computers without being detected.

The McAfee expert said the hackers have targeted government networks with military information for at least four years, using code that automatically searched infected computers for dozens of military terms in Korean, including "U.S. Army," ''secret," ''Joint Chiefs of Staff" and "Operation Key Resolve," an annual military exercise held by U.S. Forces Korea and the South Korean military.

The report does not identify the government networks that were targeted, but it does mention that in 2009, the code was used to infect a social media site used by military personnel living in South Korea. McAfee did not name the military social media site, nor release what language it is in, at the request of U.S. authorities who cited security issues. South Korea has a military force of 639,000 people, and the U.S. has 28,500 military personnel based in the country.

McAfee also said it listed only some of the keywords the malware searched for in its report. It said it withheld many other keywords that indicated the targeting of classified material, at the request of U.S. officials, due to the sensitivity of releasing specific names and programs.

"These included names of individuals, base locations, weapons systems and assets," said Sherstobitoff.

Choi, who works for a South Korean cybersecurity company, has made similar discoveries through IssueMakersLab, a research group he and other "white-hat" hackers created.

Results of a report Choi produced were published in April by Boan News, a Seoul-based website focused on South Korean security issues, but they did not get broad attention. That report included many search terms not included in the McAfee report, including the English-language equivalents of Korean keywords.

Both McAfee and IssueMakersLab found that any documents, reports and even PowerPoint files with military keywords on infected computers would have been copied and sent back to the attackers.

The attackers are also able to erase hard drives en masse by uploading malware and sending remote-control commands, which is what happened March 20.

Before that attack, hackers had been sending spy malware on domestic networks for months, giving them the ability to gather information about how their internal servers work, what websites the users visit and which computers are responsible for security, the researchers found. This information would have been crucial for planning the coordinated attacks on banks and TV networks.

Anti-virus software and safe practices such as avoiding links and attachments on suspicious emails can prevent computers from getting infected, but the March attack shows how difficult this can be to accomplish on a broad scale. Ironically, some of the malicious codes used were disguised as an anti-virus product from Ahnlab Inc., South Korea's largest anti-virus maker, said McAfee.

McAfee said it shared its findings with U.S. authorities in Seoul who are in close collaboration with South Korean military authorities.

Tim Junio, who studies cyberattacks at Stanford University's Center for International Security and Cooperation, said the McAfee report provides "pretty compelling evidence that North Korea is responsible" for the attacks in the South by tying the series of hacks to a single source, and by showing that users of a military social media site were targeted.

There are clues in the code as well. For example, a password, used again and again over the years to unlock encrypted files, had the number 38 in it, a politically loaded figure for two countries divided on the 38th parallel, security experts said.

Pentagon spokesman Army Lt. Col. James Gregory said the Defense Department is aware of the study and looks forward to reviewing it.

"The Defense Department takes the threat of cyber espionage and cyber security very seriously, which is why we have taken steps to increase funding to strengthen capabilities and harden networks to mitigate against the risk of cyber espionage," he said.

South Korea's Defense Ministry says its secrets are safe. Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok said officials were unaware of McAfee's study, but added that it's technically impossible to have lost classified reports because computers with military intelligence are not connected to the Internet. When accessing the Web, military officials use different computers disconnected from the internal military server, he said.

A hack of sensitive South Korean military computers from the Internet "cannot be done," Kim said. "It's physically separated."

Sherstobitoff, however, said it can be done, though he's not sure that it has been.

"While it is not entirely impossible to extract information from a closed network that is disconnected from the Internet, it would require some extensive planning and understanding of the internal layout to stage such an exfiltration to the external world," he said.

Kwon Seok-chul, chief executive officer of Seoul-based cyber security firm Cuvepia Inc., said recent hacking incidents suggest that hackers may have enough skills to infiltrate into the internal servers of Korean and U.S. military. Even if two networks are separated, he said, hackers will do anything to find some point where they converge.

"It takes time, but if you find the connection, you can still get into the internal server," Kwon said.

FBI Assistant Director Richard McFeely would not comment on McAfee's findings, but said in a written statement that "such reports often give the FBI a better understanding of the evolving cyber threat."

Neither the McAfee nor the IssueMakersLab reports suggest who is responsible for the cyberattacks, but many security experts believe North Korea is the likely culprit.

South Korean authorities have blamed the North for many cyberattacks on its government and military websites and have said they linked the March 20 attacks to at least six computers located in North Korea that were used to distribute malicious codes.

Several calling cards were left behind after the March attack, taunting victims. Two different and previously unknown groups separately took credit: The "Whois Hacking Team" posted pictures of skulls and a warning, while the "NewRomanic Cyber Army Team" said it had leaked private information from banks and media organizations.

"Hi, Dear Friends," began one such note. "We now have a great deal of personal information in our hands."

But McAfee says that claim, and others ? including tweets and online rumors claiming credit for prior attacks ? were meant to mislead the public and investigators, covering up the deeper spying program.

James Lewis, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the attack is far more skillful and took place over a much longer period than was previously thought.

"I used to joke that it's hard for the North Koreans to have a cyber army because they don't have electricity, but it looks as if the regime has been investing heavily in this," said Lewis. "Clearly this was part of a larger effort to acquire strategic military information and to influence South Korean politics."

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has made computer use and the importance of developing the IT sector hallmarks of his reign, devoting significant state resources toward science and technology. Though much of the country lacks steady electricity, a massive hydroelectric power station keeps the capital ? and state computer centers ? humming.

North Korean officials insist the emphasis on cyberwarfare is on protecting North Korea from cyberattacks, not waging them, but there is widespread suspicion that resources are also being poured into training scores of cyberwarriors as well.

Relatively few North Koreans are allowed to access the Internet ? especially when compared to the South's hyper-wired society ? but it too has seen its computer systems paralyzed by cyberattacks. Pyongyang blames the U.S. and South Korea and has warned of "merciless retaliation."

Martha Mendoza reported from San Jose, California.

Source: http://www.staradvertiser.com/news/breaking/214572161.html

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Windows 8.1 Shipping to PC Makers in Late August


The first big update to Windows 8 - dubbed Windows 8.1 - will be available to manufacturers by late August, Microsoft announced today at its Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC).

That release to OEMs means that Windows 8.1 will be pre-loaded on "many" of the devices that will be released ahead of the holiday season, chief marketing officer Tami Reller said during a morning keynote.

PC makers like HP, Acer, and more are typically provided with advance access to new and updated versions of Microsoft's OS so they can test them out and pre-load them onto upcoming systems.

Windows 8.1 is scheduled to be released to consumers later this year as a free update for Windows 8 users. Microsoft has not announced a hard release date yet, but promised more details in the coming months.

A preview version of Windows 8.1 was released at Microsoft's Build conference in San Francisco last month. As PCMag noted in our hands on, "the new OS make helpful changes to the user interface, [and] drastically improves built-in search, SkyDrive cloud syncing, and the Windows app store. The included set of modern apps also get refreshes, and business and security features get bolstered."

Microsoft's Jensen Harris provided another Windows 8.1 demo today at WPC, which highlighted how Windows 8.1 is "optimized to work great on small-form-factor devices and portrait view."

"He also demoed the Reading List app that lets you share articles from the web and content from other apps to read later which roams with you across your Windows devices through the cloud courtesy of SkyDrive," Microsoft said in a blog post.

The demo also highlighted the updated search experience on Windows 8.1, which is powered by Bing, including music search via Xbox Music. Users "can share a webpage to the Xbox Music app where it 'scrapes' the webpage for mentions of songs to create a playlist for you based on the music mentioned on a webpage," Microsoft said.

WPC attendees also got a look at Miracast, which is built into Windows 8.1 and streams HD video and audio over Wi-Fi to another display like a TV. "With Surface Pro, [Harris] essentially turned a TV into a whiteboard with the OneNote app," Microsoft said.

For more, check out the slideshow above and see PCMag's full review of Windows 8.

Source: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2421451,00.asp?kc=PCRSS05079TX1K0000993

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Federal officials end inquiry into Wynn

LAS VEGAS (AP) ? Federal investigators are done looking into a $135 million donation casino giant Wynn Resorts gave to a university in the Chinese gambling enclave of Macau.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has concluded its investigation and is not pursuing enforcement action against the company, assistant director of the commission's Salt Lake Regional office Karen Martinez said Monday.

Speaking to The Associated Press from his boat on the Spanish island of Ibiza on Monday morning, CEO Steve Wynn said he never had any doubt federal investigators would clear the company.

"We were so sanguine that we never paid any attention to it; we had no exposure. It was a nonevent except for the damn newspapers," he said.

The six-month federal investigation has its origins in an ongoing battle between former friends and business partners Kazuo Okada and Wynn.

Okada used to be Wynn Resorts' single largest shareholder, but the company forcibly bought back his shares after it said it found that Okada made improper payments to overseas gambling regulators.

The two have traded accusations of unethical or illegal conduct during an extended legal, and seemingly personal, dispute.

In a 2012 letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission, Okada suggested that the company's $135 million donation to the University of Macau Development Foundation may have violated the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act? a law that bars U.S. companies from paying off officials to win business overseas.

He characterized the 2011 donation as "suspicious" and noted that the Development Foundation's lead trustee is also a member of the Macau government. He said that the donation coincided with Wynn's request for land to develop a third casino.

"I am at a complete loss as to the business justification for the donation, other than that it was an attempt to curry favor with those that have ultimate authority for issuing gaming licenses," Okada wrote.

Wynn Resorts has dismissed these charges. On Monday, Steve Wynn noted that Okada himself approved the gift. The Japanese billionaire was photographed representing the company in a ceremony to commemorate the donation.

"His ridiculous allegation about our gift, which all 16 of our directors approved, including him, the phony bum," Wynn said.

Okada is now under federal investigation himself for possible bribery in the Philippines.

A spokesman for Okada did not return calls and emails seeking comment.

In February, Nevada gambling officials concluded their own investigation into the donation and found no evidence of wrongdoing.

Wynn said he had never worried about the investigations damaging the company's reputation.

"The gaming industry in America has always been the subject of reports that were falsely researched and relied on rumor," he said.

"It never affects our business."

___

Hannah Dreier can be reached at http://twitter.com/hannahdreier.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/federal-officials-end-inquiry-wynn-204626709.html

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Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti creating coalition of proven staffers

As he continues to assemble his staff, it appears as if Mayor Eric Garcetti is bringing together what can best be described as a coalition government, in an example of what happens when the incumbent is not running and the winner is able to draw from a variety of sources. Garcetti, so far, has taken on folks who worked for both former mayors Antonio Villaraigosa and James Hahn.

The Hahn administration influence is the strongest. Staffers who worked for Hahn and now on the Garcetti mayoral team include Deputy Mayor Doane Liu and spokesman Yusef Robb. Also said to be in the mix is Sarah Dusseault, a former Hahn adviser who worked as policy director for Garcetti when he was on the City Council. From Villaraigosa, those remaining in the mayor's office include spokeswoman Vicki Curry, Public Safety Deputy Mayor Eileen Decker, transportation aide Borja Leon and scheduling director Martha Preciado. And, if you want to go back that far, at one time former Councilwoman Jan Perry worked for former Mayor Richard Riordan on census issues, before winning her seat on the City Council.

As he is running for Secretary of State, state Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Van Nuys, received a boost last week. Padilla, who is being termed out of his Senate post, was recently re-elected as president of the National Association of Latino Elected and

Appointed Officials (NALEO), which will also give him a national platform. He said the organization is committed to working on national immigration reform as well as promoting Latino elected officials from both parties. "I am humbled and honored that my colleagues have chosen me to again lead this organization," Padilla said. "The coming months offer our organization and community an extraordinary opportunity."

Gov. Jerry Brown set the special election to fill the seat vacated by the election of Councilman Bob Blumenfield, who gave up his 45th Assembly District seat, and it is shaping up to be a crowded race, pitting a number of political staff members against one another. A primary election is set for Sept. 17, and if no candidate gets a majority, the top two candidates will have a Nov. 19 runoff. Those who have expressed interest in running for the seat include Democrats Matt Dababneh, district director to Rep. Brad Sherman; Damian Carroll, district director for Councilman Paul Krekorian; and Jeff Ebenstein, a field deputy to Councilman Paul Koretz. Blumenfield also has a favorite in the race with Andra Hoffman, a Glendale City College faculty member. Two other Democrats are Daniel McCrory and Elizabeth Badger, while Republicans who have announced include engineer Chris Kolski and businesswoman Susan Shelley.

Monica Ratliff, the newest member of the LAUSD board, found herself right in the middle of the battle for board president last week. She was able to break with the board's tradition of launching into an automatic vote by getting the two candidates, Tamar Galatzan and Richard Vladovic, to explain what they would do as board president. "I was interested in what they had to say and to know who their choice for vice president would be and why," she said later. "I want to make sure that everything is transparent." Ratliff ended up voting for Vladovic, saying she was persuaded by his speech to promise more academic support for students and a better working relationship on the board.

Rick Orlov is a Daily News staff writer and columnist. His column, Tipoff, appears Mondays. For a daily fix on politics, go to the Sausage Factory at blogs.dailynews.com/politics. Orlov can be reached 213-978-0390 or at rick.orlov@dailynews.com. Daily News staff writer Barbara Jones contributed.

Source: http://www.dailynews.com/news/ci_23615833/los-angeles-mayor-eric-garcetti-creating-coalition-proven?source=rss

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