Jamaica to abolish slavery-era flogging law
















KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — Jamaica is preparing to abolish a slavery-era law allowing flogging and whipping as means of punishing prisoners, the Caribbean country’s justice ministry said Thursday.


The ministry said the punishment hasn’t been ordered by a court since 2004 but the statutes remain in the island’s penal code. It was administered with strokes from a tamarind-tree switch or a cat o’nine tails, a whip made of nine, knotted cords.













Justice Minister Mark Golding says the “degrading” punishment is an anachronism which violates Jamaica’s international obligations and is preventing Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller‘s government from ratifying the U.N. convention against torture.


“The time has come to regularize this situation by getting these colonial-era laws off our books once and for all,” Golding said in a Thursday statement.


The Cabinet has already approved repealing the flogging law and amendments to other laws in the former British colony, where plantation slavery was particularly brutal.


The announcement was welcomed by human rights activists who view the flogging law as a barbaric throwback in a nation populated mostly by the descendants of slaves.


“We don’t really see that (the flogging law) has any part in the approach of dealing with crime in a modern democracy,” said group spokeswoman Susan Goffe.


But there are no shortage of crime-weary Jamaicans who feel that authorities should not drop the old statutes but instead enforce them, arguing that thieves who steal livestock or violent criminals who harm innocent people should receive a whipping to teach them a lesson.


“The worst criminals need strong punishing or else they’ll do crimes over and over,” said Chris Drummond, a Kingston man with three school-age children. “Getting locked up is not always enough.”


The last to suffer the punishment in Jamaica was Errol Pryce, who was sentenced to four years in prison and six lashes in 1994 for stabbing his mother-in-law.


Pryce was flogged the day before being released from prison in 1997 and later complained to the U.N. Human Rights Committee, which ruled in 2004 that the form of corporal punishment was cruel, inhuman and degrading and violated his rights. Jamaican courts then stopped ordering whipping or flogging.


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Migration officials say cholera in Haiti on rise
















GENEVA (AP) — The world’s largest agency that deals with global migration says cholera is again on the rise in Haiti.


The International Organization for Migration says Haitian officials have confirmed 3,593 cholera cases and another 837 suspected cases since Hurricane Sandy‘s passage.













IOM spokesman Jumbe Omari Jumbe told reporters Friday in Geneva “the numbers are going up” particularly in camps around the capital, Port-au-Prince.


He said his organization has responded by handing out about 10,000 cholera kits in 31 camps this week “badly hit by cholera in the area.”


Cholera is a bacterial infection that spreads through water, and Haiti’s lack of proper sanitation and sewage systems makes the country more vulnerable.


Haiti was spared a direct hit from Hurricane Sandy on Oct. 24, but received heavy rain for several days.


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NBC to replace “Today Show” producer, source says
















(Reuters) – NBC is expected to name Alexandra Wallace, a senior vice president of the network’s news division, as the executive in charge of “The Today Show,” the latest reshuffling of the show’s personnel after it slipped to second in ratings this year behind “Good Morning America.”


Wallace, who would be the first woman in charge of the long-running NBC show that pioneered early morning TV in the United States, will be named along with a producer to replace Jim Bell, according to a person familiar with the decision.













Bell, who has headed the show since 2005, was blamed this year for the controversial firing of Ann Curry as anchor alongside Matt Lauer.


Curry was replaced by Savannah Guthrie in June.


“Good Morning America” or GMA, produced by Walt Disney‘s ABC unit, closed the gap with “Today.”


“Today,” the top-rated morning show for 16 consecutive years, started the current TV season number two. In late October, NBC drew 7,000 more viewers than GMA among 25 to 54 year-old viewers, the age group advertisers most want to reach, its first lead since September 10. GMA still led among overall viewers.


The first two hours of “The Today Show,” from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m., collected $ 485 million in ad revenues in 2011, up 6.6 percent from 2010, according to Kantar Media, which provides data to advertisers. GMA took in $ 299 million last year.


It is unclear when the changes at “The Today Show” will take effect, according to The New York Times, which first reported the shakeup.


Bell this summer produced NBC’s Summer Olympics coverage and is expected to become the full-time executive producer of the network’s ongoing Olympic coverage.


NBC, a unit of Comcast Corp., is also in the midst of layoffs at its entertainment unit, shedding 500 positions primarily at its cable channels. Jay Leno’s late night TV show cut about two dozen of its crew members about two months ago.


(Reporting By Ronald Grover)


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World stocks flat on Europe, US woes; Japan gains
















BANGKOK (AP) — Trading on world stock markets was lethargic Friday after data showed Europe slipped back into recession and several big U.S. retailers disappointed investors with weak forecasts.


The European Union’s statistics agency said Thursday that the combined economy of the 17 countries that use the euro contracted 0.1 percent in the third quarter from the previous quarter. Surveys pointing to difficult conditions ahead suggest the recession could deepen.













“Although unsurprising, data in Europe confirmed that the region fell back into recession, an outcome that will do little to ease tensions,” analysts at Credit Agricole CIB in Hong Kong said in an email commentary.


European stocks were flat in early trading. Britain’s FTSE 100 fell 0.1 percent to 5,672.68. Germany‘s DAX was almost unchanged at 7,044.06. France‘s CAC-40 inched up less than 0.1 percent to 3,385.29.


Wall Street also flat-lined ahead of the open. Dow Jones industrial futures were almost unchanged at 12,524. S&P 500 futures inched up marginally to 1,352.10.


Trading in Asia was slightly more energetic. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 0.2 percent to 21,159.01. South Korea‘s Kospi fell 0.5 percent to 1,860.83. Australia‘s S&P/ASX 200 lost 0.3 percent to 4,336.80.


Benchmarks in Taiwan, New Zealand and mainland China fell. The Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.8 percent to 2,014.72 and the Shenzhen Composite Index fell 0.7 percent to 800.20. Benchmarks in Singapore, Thailand and the Philippines rose.


Japan‘s Nikkei 225 stock index jumped 2.2 percent to close at 9,024.16, rallying for a second straight day on expectations that the opposition Liberal Democratic Party may win elections next month and pursue more aggressive stimulus policies than the current leadership.


LDP leader Shinzo Abe has said he is determined to push for such policies and to find ways to weaken the yen, whose strength against other currencies has hammered exporters.


Stan Shamu, strategist at IG Markets in Melbourne, said Abe wants an inflation target of between 2 and 3 percent as a way to cheapen the Japanese currency, perhaps by printing yen or bulking up on purchases of assets like Japanese government bonds. Still, the target might be difficult to achieve, given the economy’s weakness, he said.


“With such a big export economy, the yen has massive significance on how the local economy performs,” Shamu said.


Japan’s exporters, whose fortunes are linked to the yen’s valuation, were buoyed by the prospect of a changing of the guard. Mazda Motor Corp. soared 7.1 percent. Nissan Motor Co. jumped 5.1 percent. Nikon Corp. surged 7.2 percent and Canon Inc. gained 5.8 percent.


In Australia, Whitehaven Coal fell 1.8 percent after announcing it would scale back some operations due to the decline in global coal prices.


In the U.S., investors were dealt dual blows Thursday: worse-than-expected revenue from global retailing giant Wal-Mart and data showing that manufacturing weakened in the Philadelphia and New York regions, reflecting damage from Superstorm Sandy.


Wal-Mart, Ross Stores and Limited Brands, the owner of Victoria’s Secret, also disappointed investors by issuing profit forecasts that fell short of expectations.


Benchmark oil for December delivery was up 13 cents to $ 85.58 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell 87 cents to close at $ 85.45 a barrel in New York on Thursday.


In currencies, the dollar weakened to 80.98 yen from 81.21 yen late Thursday in New York. The euro fell to $ 1.2748 from $ 1.2773.


___


Follow Pamela Sampson on Twitter at http://twitter.com/pamelasampson


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Canada’s Carney says rate hikes “less imminent”
















TORONTO (Reuters) – Interest rate hikes have become less imminent than the Bank of Canada once expected, although rates are still likely to rise, central bank Governor Mark Carney said in an interview published on Saturday.


“Over time, rates are likely to increase somewhat, but over time, so a less imminent timing relative to our expectation,” Carney said in an interview with the National Post newspaper.













Canada’s economy rebounded better than most from the global economic recession, and the Bank of Canada is the only central bank in the Group of Seven leading industrialized nations that is currently hinting at higher interest rates.


But Carney has also made clear that there will be no rate rise for a while, despite high domestic borrowing rates that he sees as a major risk to a still fragile economy.


“We’ve been very clear in terms of lines of defense in addressing financial vulnerabilities,” he said in the interview. “And the most prominent one, obviously, in Canada, is household debt.”


He said the bank was monitoring the impact of four successive government moves to tighten mortgage lending, which aimed to take the froth out of a hot housing market without causing a damaging crash in prices.


A Reuters poll published on Friday showed the majority of 20 forecasters believe the government has done enough to rein in runaway prices, preventing the type of crash that devastated the U.S. market.


The experts expect Canadian housing prices to fall 10 percent over the next several years, but they do not expect the recent property boom to end in a U.S.-style collapse.


(Reporting by Janet Guttsman; Editing by Vicki Allen)


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Congress, Obama face dynamite in “fiscal cliff”: CEOs
















BOSTON (Reuters) – Corporate America is raising the volume of its plea that the U.S. government avert a year-end “fiscal cliff” that could send the nation back into recession, but chief executives aren’t pushing the panic button just yet.


With a heated election season in the rear-view mirror, executives are calling on the White House and congressional leaders to head off a self-imposed deadline that could bring $ 600 billion in spending cuts and higher taxes early in 2013 if they are unable to reach a deal on cutting the federal budget deficit.













The Business Roundtable on Tuesday kicked off a print, radio and online ad campaign on which it plans to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars featuring the chiefs of Honeywell International Inc , Xerox Corp and United Parcel Service Inc calling on lawmakers to resolve the issue.


In an opinion piece published on Tuesday evening on the Wall Street Journal’s website, Goldman Sachs Chief Executive Officer Lloyd Blankfein urged the business community and the Obama administration to compromise and reconcile so as not to derail the fragile recovery.


One of the more dramatic warnings of the consequences of allowing the U.S. economy to go over the fiscal cliff came from Honeywell CEO David Cote.


“If the last debt ceiling discussion was playing with fire, this time they’re playing with nitroglycerin,” Cote said in an interview. “If they go off the cliff, I think it would spark a recession that’s a lot bigger than economists think. Some think it would just be a small fire. I think it could turn into a conflagration.”


The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that the U.S. economy would contract 0.5 percent in 2013 if the government fails to stop the budget cuts and tax increases – far below the 2 percent growth economists currently forecast.


A failure in Washington to solve the crisis by the year’s end could prompt major companies to curtail investment plans, said Duncan Niederauer, CEO of NYSE Euronext , operator of the New York Stock Exchange.


“We simply won’t be investing in the United States. We will be investing elsewhere where we have more certainty of the outcome,” Niederauer said in an interview.


About a dozen top U.S. CEOs, including General Electric Co’s Jeff Immelt, Aetna Inc’s Mark Bertolini, American Express Co’s Ken Chenault and Dow Chemical Co’s Andrew Liveris are scheduled to meet with President Barack Obama on Wednesday to discuss the issue.


The four are members of “Fix the Debt,” an ad-hoc lobbying organization that this week launched an advertising campaign that advocates long-term debt reduction.


UNCERTAINTY FACTOR


Bank of America Corp CEO Brian Moynihan said on Tuesday that worries about the cliff have companies holding off on spending.


“That uncertainty continues to hold back the recovery,” Moynihan said, speaking at an investor conference in New York.


Sandy Cutler, CEO of manufacturer Eaton Corp , shared his concern.


“Until we solve the fiscal issues (in the United States and Europe), you’re not going to get back to normal GDP growth,” Cutler told investors on Tuesday.


CEOs are not alone in this worry. The CBO report warned that failure to reach a deal could push the U.S. unemployment rate up to 9.1 percent, the highest since July 1991. It is currently 7.9 percent.


Obama and the Republican leadership of the House of Representatives have signaled a more conciliatory tone since last week’s election, when Obama soundly defeated Republican challenger Mitt Romney, whose party retained a majority in the House.


Wilbur Ross, an investor known for taking stakes in distressed companies, is bracing for higher tax rates in 2013.


“We, like many people, have been trying to utilize gains this year. It does seem that the probability is that rates will go up,” Ross said in an interview with Reuters Insider. “We don’t have a “for sale” sign on anything. But we are mindful that there is a benefit to concluding things this year rather than next.


NO SIGNS OF PANIC


Concerns about the cliff have not prompted customers to cancel orders, though they have added to an overall level of uneasiness that has companies wary of making large capital purchases or hiring significant numbers of new workers.


“We haven’t seen the panicking, like, ‘I’m not going to order something because of the fiscal cliff,’” said Steve Shawley, chief financial officer of heating and cooling systems maker Ingersoll Rand Plc . “Customers are being very judicious with their orders.”


Likewise, JPMorgan Chase & Co CEO Jamie Dimon last month told investors he did not expect the negotiations to hurt lending in the fourth quarter.


“The fiscal cliff isn’t going to change us,” Dimon said, referring to JPMorgan’s commercial bank, which loans money to businesses. The bank’s investment banking side could be more vulnerable if the debate makes investors jittery, he allowed.


WEAPONS, MEDICINES IN THE CROSS-HAIRS


The defense and healthcare sectors are the most vulnerable to the fiscal cliff, as they face the threat of sequestration — automatic, across-the-board cuts to their funding.


Makers of weapons systems note that they have long been preparing for declining sales as the United States winds down two long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The industry has already shed tens of thousands of jobs and closed facilities.


Lockheed Martin Corp’s new president and chief operating officer, Marillyn Hewson, told analysts on Monday her company had been preparing for tighter defense budgets for years, even before the sequestration deal.


“We aren’t going to see a major change,” said Hewson. “We’ve been very proactive as a leadership team in taking actions in recent years to address our cost structure, to look at how we can make our product more affordable.”


Automatic cuts to the federal budget could reduce federal health spending by $ 21.5 billion in 2013, potentially affecting everything from Medicare to the Food and Drug Administration, according to an analysis by PwC’s Health Research Institute.


Vincent Forlenza, the CEO of Becton Dickinson & Co , said the labs he supplies have held off on buying new instruments because of the threat of spending cuts.


“If we don’t get to a deal we will have another year of paralysis and putting off research,” Forlenza said. “The impact of uncertainty on the (National Institutes of Health) budget is causing our research customers to put off research.”


(The story corrects spelling of company name in penultimate paragraph to “Becton Dickinson” instead of “Beckton Dickinson”)


(Additional reporting by John McCrank, Nick Zieminski, Caroline Humer, Jed Horowitz, Sharon Begley and Daniel Wilchins in New York, Rick Rothacker in Charlotte, North Carolina, Nichola Groom in Los Angeles, Andrea Shalal-Esa in Washington, Debra Sherman in Chicago and Anna Driver in Houston; Editing by Patricia Kranz and Steve Orlofsky and Carol Bishopric)


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Michael Jackson’s assistant files class-action lawsuit against “This Is It” tour promoter
















LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – Michael Jackson has been dead for more than three years now – but apparently he lives on in the halls of America’s legal system.


Jackson’s former assistant, Michael Amir Williams, filed a class-action lawsuit against concert promoters AEG Live in Los Angeles Superior Court on Friday, claiming he and others hired to attend to the “Beat It” singer during his would-be “This Is It” tour at London’s O2 Arena were deprived of at least $ 7.5 million dollars in pay.













According to the suit, AEG was responsible for the financial loss because it hired Dr. Conrad Murray — who was found guilty of causing the singer’s death – to care for Jackson.


The suit claims that Jackson “bargained for the addition of Class to help Michael Jackson give the ‘first class performance’ as required by Contract. The express terms of the Contract allowed for class to be paid by AEG up to $ 7.5 million and any amount over $ 7.5 million to be paid for by Michael Jackson.”


Unfortunately, AEG also hired Murray, who administered a fatal dose of Propofol to Jackson in June 2009, before the concerts could take place. (Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter for Jackson’s death in November 2011.)


AEG’s lawyer, Marvin Putnam of O’Melveny & Myers, calls the lawsuit “frivolous” and “truly unfortunate.”


“This lawsuit is clearly frivolous; it is literally barred by at least four different legal doctrines,” Putnam said in a statement provided to TheWrap. “The easiest is that Mr. Williams was a personal employee of Michael Jackson’s, and was never a beneficiary of Mr. Jackson’s contract with AEG Live. As such he has no legal standing to sue on that contract. Nor can he legally bring a claim for Mr. Jackson’s wrongful death. The idea that Mr. Williams purports to sue on behalf of the many persons who did enter into relationships with AEG Live and Jackson in connection with the This Is It Tour, and with whom AEG Live parted ways with the utmost friendship and respect, is disgraceful. It is truly unfortunate that so many see Mr. Jackson’s demise as an opportunity to grab as much for themselves as possible. This is just the latest wrongful death lawsuit with someone hoping to profit from Michael Jackson’s tragic death in the same way they profited from his life.”


Williams’ suit alleges breach of express terms of contract; breach of implied terms of contract; and breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The complaint seeks unspecified damages, plus court costs and attorneys’ fees.


(Pamela Chelin contributed to this report)


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World stocks fall as talks on US budget deal stall
















AMSTERDAM (AP) — World stocks slid Thursday as the eurozone fell into recession and hopes faded for a quick agreement among U.S. leaders not to hike taxes and cut government spending — a potential double whammy which could derail the world’s biggest economy.


President Barack Obama has said he is willing to extend current tax cuts for all but the richest 2 percent, but Congress opposes that. Unless they reach a compromise, across-the-board tax increases and spending reductions will take effect automatically in 2013 at a cost of about $ 800 billion. Economists say that could knock the U.S. economy back into recession.













Meanwhile, the European Union’s statistics agency confirmed that the eurozone countries are in recession, with GDP contracting 0.1 percent in the third quarter from the previous three-month period.


European stocks fell in early trading. Britain’s FTSE 100 lost 0.3 percent to 5,704.60 while Germany’s DAX fell 0.5 percent to 7,063.42. France’s CAC-40 shed 0.3 percent to 3,389.17.


After sharp falls Wednesday, U.S. stock futures rose fractionally ahead of the release of several manufacturing surveys that some analysts said could show a modest improvement in activity in November. Dow Jones industrial futures rose 0.2 percent to 12,563 and S&P 500 futures added 0.3 percent to 1,357.


Analysts at Credit Agricole CIB said in a market commentary that a “cautious tone” is likely to permeate trading, given the uncertainty over the situation in the U.S. Obama is expected to meet the top leaders of both political parties at the White House on Friday for discussions.


Asian indexes tumbled, though Japanese stocks rose thanks to a drop in the value of the yen, which helps the country’s exporters.


Hong Kong’s Hang Seng tumbled 1.6 percent to 21,108.93. South Korea’s Kospi shed 1.2 percent to 1,870.72. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.9 percent to 4,349.20. Benchmarks in Singapore, Taiwan and Thailand also fell.


In mainland China, the Shanghai Composite Index lost 1.2 percent to 2,030.29, the lowest close in more than a month. The Shenzhen Composite Index lost 1.6 percent to 805.91.


In Japan, the Nikkei 225 index rallied 1.9 percent to close at 8,829.72 due to the impact of a weaker yen, which fell after Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda reportedly pledged to dissolve the parliament by Friday if the opposition agreed to key reforms. Parliamentary elections could be set for Dec. 16.


Investors “hope that there may be some more stimulatory policies as a result of that,” said Peter Elston, strategist at Aberdeen Asset Management in Singapore.


Overall, many investors remain uneasy with the persistent weakness in the world’s biggest economies and a lack of confidence, which discourages companies and households from spending despite stimulus programs by central banks.


“The concern that I have is that when economies were weak three years ago, governments were able to come to the rescue,” Elston said. “They are not as able to provide support now because their balance sheets are a lot weaker than they were.”


Benchmark oil for December delivery was down 9 cents to $ 86.23 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after a sharp rise Wednesday after Israel bombed targets in the Gaza Strip.


In currencies, the euro rose to $ 1.2765 from $ 1.2745 late Wednesday in New York. The dollar jumped to 81.21 yen from 80.17 yen, its second rise of more than one percent in two days.


___


Pamela Sampson in Bangkok contributed to this story.


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Beating tax cheats key to Italy’s recovery plan
















ROME (AP) — Good plumbers may be worth their weight in gold, but when one was spotted zipping around in a bright red Ferrari, Italian tax police were fast on his trail.


Stamping out entrenched tax evasion is crucial to Premier Mario Monti‘s quest to keep Italy from succumbing to the European debt crisis, and it is critical to fellow eurozone members in more dire straits, such as Greece and Spain — which are also notorious for making cheating the taxman a way of life.













Indeed, Greece’s international rescue creditors have been pressing Greece for two years to reform its ailing tax system, citing poor collection as a key factor keeping the country mired in crisis. In Spain, where tax fraud is rampant, as much as €90 billion ($ 150 billion) is lost each year to tax fraud — the equivalent of the country’s national debt, according to Spain’s main tax inspectors union.


To succeed in Italy, authorities will have to catch the legions of self-employed and small business owners who brazenly lie about their earnings, like the plumber in the eastern town of Pescara, who socked away undeclared income in 30 bank accounts, or a successful pastry shop owner in Calabria, who on his tax return claimed he was earning next to crumbs.


And those are the less sophisticated schemers.


Tax police officials say that wealthy Italians, their companies and foreigners who make their money in Italy are increasingly trying to avoid taxes by using such strategies as falsely declaring that their base of operations or residence is abroad.


Another daunting challenge is the so-called “submerged” economy, a term embracing Italians who declare only a fraction or nothing at all of their earnings — and dentists, lawyers, doctors and other big-earning professionals are frequently among the worst offenders.


Tax evasion of all types in Italy totals about euros 240 billion ($ 300 billion), or 15 percent of the country’s gross domestic product of €1.6 trillion ($ 2 trillion), tax police estimate. Winning the war on tax cheats could therefore more than wipe out the country’s budget deficit, which is expected to increase to euros 42 billion ($ 53 billion), or 2.6 percent of GDP this year. That would start knocking away at the nation’s colossal public debt of €2 trillion ($ 2.5 trillion), or 125 percent of GDP.


But “big international frauds are up,” lamented Lt. Col. Gianluca Campana, in charge of the income tax unit revenue protection office at the Guardia di Finanza, Italy’s financial police corps which reports to the Economy Ministry.


The entrenched practice by many cafes, eateries, hair dressers and similar small business of neglecting to give customers mandatory cash register receipts commonly grabs the attention in crackdowns on tax evasion in Italy.


But, cautioned Campana, “one false (big business) invoice can equal no cash register receipts for coffees for two months.”


Over all of 2011, the total of non-declared income discovered by tax police amounted to some €50 billion ($ 65 billion), of which some 20 percent was due to international tax evasion, he said. By comparison, in the first nine months of this year, tax police discovered some €40 billion in undeclared income, with 30 percent of that blamed on international tax evasion, Campana said.


With the economic crisis shrinking bottom lines, and Italy increasingly on the hunt for big-time evasion, especially by big businesses, “there is a tendency to move capital abroad, using maneuvers apparently legal but which really are not,” Campana said. A classic technique consists of declaring one’s formal residence abroad in tax havens like Monte Carlo. Also common are companies that clearly have their business base in Italy but claim it is abroad in countries with far lower tax brackets.


Campana is armed with three degrees, including a masters in tax law from Milan’s Bocconi University, the prestigious economics institute formerly headed by Monti. He brings skills to this specialized police corps that are as finely tuned as sharp-shooting.


“We are going after the big cases (of evasion) in order to rake in more money,” Campana said.


The Ferrari-driving plumber hid some €2 million ($ 2.6 million) of his income over several years by giving his customers invoices — for jobs ranging from fixing leaks to installing new bathrooms — for the actual cost of his work, but kept a second, false registry of much lower figures for tax purposes, said Pescara tax police Col. Mauro Odorisio.


Armed with a 2008 law, authorities confiscated assets belonging to the plumber equivalent to the approximately €1 million ($ 1.3 million) they contend he owed in taxes, Odorisio said.


With Ferraris in red or yellow, and snazzy Porsches parked inside, Guardia di Finanza garages practically resemble luxury car dealerships.


The cars get sold to help recoup unpaid taxes and interest.


Overall, tax revenues in Italy were up by 4.1 percent, says the Economy Ministry, when comparing figures from the first eight months of 2012 with the same period in 2011, but much of that was due to new taxes, and not necessarily a revolution in citizens’ consciences about tax obligations.


Monti’s recipe relies heavily on taxes that are nearly impossible to avoid, such as sales tax. He also revived a property tax that his populist predecessor, Premier Silvio Berlusconi, had abolished in a promise to voters.


The ministry’s report last month noted that the property tax figured prominently in the “tendency toward growth” in tax revenues. But sales tax revenue dropped slightly despite higher sales tax rates, indicating that consumers were feeling the pinch of the stagnant economy.


The heavier fiscal burden seems to have driven some honest citizens to rebel against the engrained culture of tax evasion.


The number of phone calls from the public to the tax police’s hotline to report stores, restaurants and other businesses that didn’t give customers sales receipts has almost doubled in the first nine months of this year, compared with the same period in 2011.


It’s apparently dawning on Italians that shirking taxes in the end only costs them, in terms of ever-higher levies and cutbacks in public services.


Citizens now increasingly understand that “the lack of revenue over time caused by tax evaders forced the government to stiffen the tax burden on categories where you can’t evade taxes,” Campana said, referring to workers whose taxes are deducted from paychecks. Another area where evasion is close to impossible is real estate ownership.


Odorisio noted the crackdown included extending the statute of limitations on tax evasion from six to eight years and establishing prison as a penalty for big-time evasion.


Other weapons include a measure promoted by the Monti government that limits cash payments to no more than €1,000. Paying by credit card or personal check is a relatively new habit for Italians, who are used to carrying wads of cash in their pockets, even for big-ticket items like home renovations or vacations.


Past governments in Italy sometimes resorted to tax amnesties to try to boost revenues. But critics, contending some Italians counted on such a possibility, described that strategy as only perpetuating the tax cheat culture.


Spain hasn’t had much success with its own tax amnesty introduced by the conservative government in March. That measure, expiring soon, allows undeclared assets or those hidden in tax havens to be repatriated by paying a 10 percent tax without criminal penalty. The amnesty is estimated to recuperate far less than the expected €2.5 billion ($ 3.25 billion).


Greece saw demands for tax system reform from international rescue creditors added on to conditions for future rescue loan payments, as Greek authorities acknowledged that a high-profile campaign to crack down on major tax cheats has produced disappointing results.


The cash-strapped government over the last 10 months recovered just €19 million ($ 25 million) of the €13 billion ($ 17 billion) of arrears on the list. A prominent Greek magazine publisher recently tapped anger over rich tax evaders by publishing a list of people allegedly holding Swiss bank accounts. He was acquitted this month of breaching privacy laws.


Meanwhile, Italian tax police are chasing after cheats who have shown some of the most chutzpah about not paying their fair share of taxes, like the Padua woman who advertised on the Internet that she had a couple of “cash-only” bed and breakfast rooms to let.


Tax police discovered the lodgings are part of an apartment in public housing she was given after falsely declaring she was indigent on her annual tax forms.


____


AP reporters Derek Gatopoulos in Athens and Ciaran Giles in Madrid contributed to this report.


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Software pioneer McAfee says framed for murder in Belize
















BELIZE CITY (Reuters) – Computer security industry pioneer John McAfee says he has gone into hiding in Belize because he believes authorities there are trying to frame him for the murder of a neighbor, a crime he says he did not commit, according to Wired magazine.


Belize police are searching for McAfee as “a person of interest” in a murder investigation.













“You can say I’m paranoid about it, but they will kill me, there is no question. They’ve been trying to get me for months. They want to silence me,” Wired quoted McAfee as saying on its website. “I am not well liked by the prime minister. I am just a thorn in everybody’s side.”


The magazine reported that McAfee, 67, contacted one of its reporters by telephone after his neighbor Gregory Faull, was found dead on Sunday in a pool of blood. The 52-year-old American was apparently shot in the head in his home on the island of Ambergris Caye.


Police say McAfee had a history of conflict with Faull, whose post-mortem was expected to be conducted on Tuesday.


McAfee, who amassed a fortune by building the anti-virus company that bears his name, has homes and businesses in the Central American country where police say he has lived for at least two years.


It was not the first time McAfee, who has tattoos, a goatee beard and mustache, and a penchant for guns, has drawn police attention in Belize.


His premises were raided earlier this year after he was accused of holding firearms, though most were found to be licensed. The final outcome of the case is pending.


He was also suspected of running a lab to make the synthetic drug crystal meth.


“He was suspected (of making crystal meth) but he was not convicted nor was he charged. He was only suspected,” said Belize police spokesman Raphael Martinez.


McAfee also owns a security company in Belize as well as several properties, an ecological enterprise and a water taxi and ferry business.


Reuters could not reach McAfee, who police want to question.


“It would be quite nice for him to come in and answer some of the questions that could lead to the closure of this case,” Martinez said. “He is not wanted for murder, but he is wanted for questioning as a person of interest.”


One man in Belize who knows McAfee well told Reuters he believed the American’s troubles began when he turned down requests for donations to the ruling United Democratic Party (UDP) to help fund its successful re-election bid in March.


“He rejected them because he doesn’t believe in participating in politics,” said the man, who spoke on condition of anonymity, calling McAfee an “honorable person.”


McAfee said earlier this year he had refused to donate to the UDP, which could not immediately be reached for comment.


The Belize police department has reached out to counterparts in neighboring Mexico and Guatemala, asking them to detain McAfee if he leaves Belize overland.


McAfee was one of Silicon Valley’s first entrepreneurs to amass a fortune by building a business off the Internet.


The former Lockheed systems consultant started McAfee Associates in 1989, initially distributing anti-virus software as “shareware” on Internet bulletin boards.


He took the company public in 1992 and left two years later following accusations that he had hyped the arrival of a virus known as Michelangelo, which turned out to be a dud, to scare computer users into buying his company’s products.


McAfee currently has no relationship with the software company, which has since been sold to Intel Corp.


(Reporting by Jim Finkle in Boston, Jose Sanchez in Belize City, Simon Gardner and Dave Graham in Mexico City; Editing by Kieran Murray and Eric Walsh)


Internet News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Planned Parenthood seeks injunction over Oklahoma health program
















OKLAHOMA CITY (Reuters) – Planned Parenthood asked a federal judge on Tuesday to stop Oklahoma from blocking it from participating in a federally funded nutrition program that helps poor women and children at three clinics in the Tulsa area.


The request, filed in federal court in Oklahoma City, appeared aimed at combating a move similar to those taken by conservative Republicans in more than a dozen states over the past two years to eliminate funding for health services provided by Planned Parenthood.













The non-profit women’s health organization has administered a federal program called Women, Infants & Children for 18 tears in Oklahoma’s Tulsa County, but the state health department said in September it would let other clinics provide the services, blocking Planned Parenthood from taking part.


That decision followed a failed attempt in the Republican-controlled Oklahoma legislature in May to prohibit WIC benefits from being administered by Planned Parenthood because it provides abortion referrals.


The state health department has denied its decision was tied to Planned Parenthood’s position on abortion, citing decreasing caseloads, high costs and billing questions with the Planned Parenthood clinics as reasons for its decision. State health officials were not immediately available for comment.


The Oklahoma Policy Institute, a nonprofit organization that examines public policy, has called the health department’s reasons inaccurate.


Planned Parenthood attorney Tamya Cox said the group was seeking the injunction to protect access to nutritional services for about 3,000 women and children that used the three clinics in September.


The group’s request said that other clinics in Tulsa County can’t absorb the caseload that the Planned Parenthood clinics handled and that there was a three-month waiting list to make an appointment at the other clinics.


“Politics should never interfere with a woman’s access to health services – or food for her children,” Cox said.


(Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Eric Walsh)


Health News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Accuser recants sex claims against Elmo puppeteer: report
















LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – The man who claimed he had underage sex with the puppeteer behind “Sesame Street” character Elmo recanted his claims on Tuesday, U.S. media reported.


The unnamed man, now 23, had claimed that Elmo puppeteer Kevin Clash had a sexual relationship with him when the accuser was 16 years old, potentially engulfing one of the biggest childhood brands in an underage sex scandal.













“He wants it to be known that his sexual relationship with Mr. Clash was an adult consensual relationship,” the law firm Andreozzi and Associates, who represent the man, told U.S. media outlets in a statement.


Clash, 52, who had denied the allegations, said in a statement obtained by Reuters on Tuesday: “I am relieved that this painful allegation has been put to rest. I will not discuss it further.”


New York-based Sesame Workshop said on Monday that its own inquiry had concluded that the claims of underage sexual conduct against Clash were unsubstantiated.


“We are pleased that this matter has been brought to a close, and we are happy that Kevin can move on from this unfortunate episode,” Sesame Workshop said in a statement on Tuesday.


Clash, 52, the voice of Elmo for nearly three decades, had acknowledged a past relationship with his accuser but said on Monday the pair were both consenting adults at the time. He termed the allegations “false and defamatory.”


“I am a gay man. I have never been ashamed of this or tried to hide it,” Clash said on Monday, saying he was taking a break from the TV show to deal with the situation.


Sesame Workshop said the allegations involving Clash came to its attention in June when the accuser first contacted the company by email. A company executive said it had found “absolutely no evidence that the allegations were true.”


The Elmo character debuted on “Sesame Street” in 1979. While Clash was the third performer to animate the child-like shaggy red monster, Sesame Workshop credits him with turning Elmo into the international sensation he became.


(Reporting By Eric Kelsey and Piya Sinha-Roy, editing by Jill Serjeant and Cynthia Johnston)


TV News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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UK unemployment continues to fall



















Live: Bank of England inflation report and news conference



The number of people out of work in the UK has fallen to its lowest total for more than a year.


Unemployment fell by 49,000 to 2.51 million in the three months to September, taking the jobless rate to 7.8% from 7.9%.


The Office for National Statistics said that almost all the 49,000 fall was due to a decline in youth unemployment.


But the ONS said that the claimant count rose by 10,100 last month to 1.58 million, the highest since July.


The unemployment total is now 110,000 lower than for the July-September quarter last year, the ONS said. The number of people in work increased by 100,000 in the latest quarter to just under 30 million, a rise of more than half a million over the past year.


However, economists suggested that the figures indicated that the pace of job creation is slowing.


“The data therefore add to recent signs from business surveys that growing uncertainty about the economic outlook is causing increasing numbers of firms to retrench and focus on cost cutting,” said Chris Williamson, economist at economic research firm Markit.


Continue reading the main story

Even if employment in the private sector rises modestly rather than falls, it will likely not be enough to offset job cuts in the public sector as well as cater for an increasing labour force”



End Quote Howard Archer IHS Global Insight


Speaking at a news conference to present the Bank of England’s quarterly economic outlook, governor Sir Mervyn King said the figures showed that the labour market was “pretty strong”.


But he said it was hard to reconcile this with the weak growth in the economy.


Sir Mervyn said the economy had barely grown over the past two years and forecast that the recovery would be “subdued”.


“The road to recovery will be long and winding, but there are good reasons to suggest we are travelling in the right direction,” he said.


Other figures from the ONS showed that long-term unemployment – those out of work for over a year – increased by 12,000 in the quarter to September to 894,000, while 443,000 people have been jobless for more than two years, up by 21,000.


Part-time employment increased by 49,000 to 8.1 million, close to a record high, while there were 51,000 more people in full-time jobs, at 21.4 million. Unemployment among women fell by 10,000 to 1.09 million, and by 39,000 among men to 1.43 million.


Although the latest fall in unemployment was due to a reduction in youth unemployment, the ONS said that the jobless rate among 16 to 24-year-olds was still 963,000. This figure includes 315,000 unemployed young people in full-time education, the ONS said.


‘Challenges’




Nick Palmer from the ONS: “The basic message is that unemployment has continued to fall”



Mark Hoban, the Employment Minister, told the BBC: “This is another good set of figures. We’ve seen the number of people in work increase by 100,000 and youth unemployment is below a million again.”


But he insisted that there was “no room for complacency and that much hard work” remained to be done to get people back to work. “There are still some real challenges out there. We still need to tackle… long-term unemployment.”


Howard Archer, chief UK economist at IHS Global Insight, said the figures suggest “signs of some softening in the labour market’s recent impressive resilience”.


He said: “The most obvious sign of softening in the labour market came in a 10,100 rise in the number of claimant count unemployed, which was the largest increase for 13 months and followed a small rise of 800 in September.


“Even if employment in the private sector rises modestly rather than falls, it will likely not be enough to offset job cuts in the public sector as well as cater for an increasing labour force.”


The breakdown showed wide disparities across the UK, with unemployment falling in the North East and North West, but rising in Scotland and Northern Ireland.


The ONS also released pay data showing that average earnings increased by 1.8% in the year to August, 0.1% up on the previous month.


BBC News – Business



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General investigated for emails to Petraeus friend
















PERTH, Australia (AP) — In a new twist to the Gen. David Petraeus sex scandal, the Pentagon said Tuesday that the top American commander in Afghanistan, Gen. John Allen, is under investigation for alleged “inappropriate communications” with a woman who is said to have received threatening emails from Paula Broadwell, the woman with whom Petraeus had an extramarital affair.


Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said in a written statement issued to reporters aboard his aircraft, en route from Honolulu to Perth, Australia, that the FBI referred the matter to the Pentagon on Sunday.













Panetta said that he ordered a Pentagon investigation of Allen on Monday.


A senior defense official traveling with Panetta said Allen’s communications were with Jill Kelley, who has been described as an unpaid social liaison at MacDill Air Force Base, Fla., which is headquarters to the U.S. Central Command. She is not a U.S. government employee.


Kelley is said to have received threatening emails from Broadwell, who is Petraeus’ biographer and who had an extramarital affair with Petraeus that reportedly began after he became CIA director in September 2011.


Petraeus resigned as CIA director on Friday.


Allen, a four-star Marine general, succeeded Petraeus as the top American commander in Afghanistan in July 2011.


The senior official, who discussed the matter only on condition of anonymity because it is under investigation, said Panetta believed it was prudent to launch a Pentagon investigation, although the official would not explain the nature of Allen’s problematic communications.


The official said 20,000 to 30,000 pages of emails and other documents from Allen’s communications with Kelley between 2010 and 2012 are under review. He would not say whether they involved sexual matters or whether they are thought to include unauthorized disclosures of classified information. He said he did not know whether Petraeus is mentioned in the emails.


“Gen. Allen disputes that he has engaged in any wrongdoing in this matter,” the official said. He said Allen currently is in Washington.


Panetta said that while the matter is being investigated by the Defense Department Inspector General, Allen will remain in his post as commander of the International Security Assistance Force, based in Kabul. He praised Allen as having been instrumental in making progress in the war.


The FBI’s decision to refer the Allen matter to the Pentagon rather than keep it itself, combined with Panetta’s decision to allow Allen to continue as Afghanistan commander without a suspension, suggested strongly that officials viewed whatever happened as a possible infraction of military rules rather than a violation of federal criminal law.


Allen was Deputy Commander of Central Command, based in Tampa, prior to taking over in Afghanistan. He also is a veteran of the Iraq war.


In the meantime, Panetta said, Allen’s nomination to be the next commander of U.S. European Command and the commander of NATO forces in Europe has been put on hold “until the relevant facts are determined.” He had been expected to take that new post in early 2013, if confirmed by the Senate, as had been widely expected.


Panetta said President Barack Obama was consulted and agreed that Allen’s nomination should be put on hold. Allen was to testify at his confirmation hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday. Panetta said he asked committee leaders to delay that hearing.


NATO officials had no comment about the delay in Allen’s appointment.


“We have seen Secretary Panetta‘s statement,” NATO spokeswoman Carmen Romero said in Brussels. “It is a U.S. investigation.”


Panetta also said he wants the Senate Armed Services Committee to act promptly on Obama’s nomination of Gen. Joseph Dunford to succeed Allen as commander in Afghanistan. That nomination was made several weeks ago. Dunford’s hearing is also scheduled for Thursday.


___


Associated Press writer Slobodan Lekic in Kabul, Afghanistan, contributed to this report.


Asia News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Syrian Red Crescent estimates 2.5 million uprooted in Syria
















GENEVA (Reuters) – The Syrian Arab Red Crescent estimates that 2.5 million people are internally displaced within Syria by civil war, doubling the previous figure of 1.2 million used by aid agencies, the United Nations refugee agency said on Tuesday.


“The figure they are using is 2.5 million. If anything, they believe it could be more, this is a very conservative estimate,” Melissa Fleming, chief spokeswoman of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), told a news briefing in Geneva.













“So people are moving, really on the run, hiding. They are difficult to count and access,” she said.


The United Nations said on Friday that up to 4 million people inside Syria will need humanitarian aid by early next year when the country is in the grip of winter, up from 2.5 million now whose needs are not fully met.


The UNHCR has temporarily withdrawn about half of its 12 staff from north-eastern Hassaka province due to fierce fighting and insecurity that has resulted in the loss of some aid supplies and driven more Syrian Kurds into Iraq, Fleming said.


More than 407,000 Syrian refugees have registered or await registration in the surrounding region – Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan and Iraq – and more are fleeing every day, she said.


(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Janet Lawrence)


Health News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Storm volunteers mingle with stars at Glamour fest
















NEW YORK (AP) — Sandra Kyong Bradbury was star struck. She had just spied Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg a few feet away.


“How can you top that?” asked Bradbury, a New York City neonatal nurse who had helped evacuate infants from a hospital that lost power during the height of Superstorm Sandy. She was amazed that she was being honored at the same event as a Supreme Court justice — the annual Glamour Women of the Year awards, where stars of film, TV, fashion and sports share the stage with lesser-known women who have equally impressive achievements to their name.













Few events bring together such an eclectic group of honorees, not to mention presenters. At the Carnegie Hall ceremony Monday night, HBO star Lena Dunham, creator of “Girls” and a heroine to a younger generation, was introduced by Chelsea Handler and paid tribute in her speech to Nora Ephron, who died earlier this year. Ethel Kennedy was praised by her daughter, Rory, who has made a film about her famous mother. Olympic gymnast Gabby Douglas, 17, was honored along with swimming phenom Missy Franklin, also 17, and other Olympic athletes, introduced by singer Mary J. Blige and serenaded by American Idol winner Phillip Phillips. Singer-actress Selena Gomez was lauded by her friend, the actor Ethan Hawke.


But the most moving moments of the Glamour awards, now in their 22nd year, are often those involving people of whom the audience hasn’t heard. This year, the most touching moment came when one honoree, Pakistani activist and filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, brought onstage a woman who’d been the victim of an acid attack in her native Pakistan. Obaid-Chinoy won this year’s documentary short Oscar for a film about disfiguring acid attacks on Pakistani women by the men in their lives.


The evening carried reminders of Superstorm Sandy, with Newark, N.J. Mayor Cory Booker introducing some 20 women who’d been heavily involved in storm relief work. “They held us together when Sandy tried to blow us apart,” Booker said. The women worked for organizations like the American Red Cross, but also smaller volunteer groups like Jersey City Sandy Recovery, an impromptu group formed by three women in Jersey City, N.J., who wanted a way to help storm-ravaged communities.


Singer-rapper Pharrell Williams introduced one of his favorite architects, the Iraqi-born Zaha Hadid, 62, who designed the aquatic center for the London Olympics and is now at work on 43 projects around the world.


Activist Erin Merryn was honored for her work increasing awareness of child sex abuse — a horror she had endured during her own childhood. A law urging schools to educate children about sex abuse prevention, Erin’s Law, has now passed in four states. “I won’t stop until I get it passed in all 50 states,” Merryn insisted in her speech.


Vogue editor Anna Wintour saluted a fellow fashion luminary, honoree Annie Leibovitz, the creator of so many iconic photographs over the years. Jenna Lyons, the president of J. Crew, got kind words from her presenter, former supermodel Lauren Hutton. Chelsea Clinton brought up a stageful of women from across the country who had been involved in politics this year, noting that, while there is still a long way to go, progress was made in 2012.


The lifetime achievement award went to Ginsburg, 79, who made a few quips about being honored by a fashion magazine. “The judiciary is not a profession that ranks very high among the glamorously attired,” the justice said. She also noted that although she was only the second female Supreme Court justice (Sandra Day O’Connor came first), she was the first justice to be honored by Glamour.


An affectionate tribute to the late Ephron followed, with three actresses — Cynthia Nixon, and two Meryl Steep daughters, Mamie and Grace Gummer, reading from a graduation speech she had given at Wellesley College.


Actress Dunham, in her speech, touched on politics and expressed her own relief that President Barack Obama had won re-election, saying she felt it was crucial for reproductive freedom and other issues of women’s rights. “I wanted control of my womb before I really knew what my womb was,” she quipped.


After the ceremony, which was presided over by Glamour editor in chief Cindi Leive, honorees and presenters headed to a private dinner. There, Sandy volunteers mingled with the stars. One woman, Lynier Harper, had spent six nights during Sandy at the Brooklyn YMCA where she works, taking care of other people. “When I finally went back home, my house was totally destroyed,” she said. She has moved in with her sister while she seeks a new home.


A group of seven nurses came from New York University’s Langone Medical Center, which lost power during the storm. The neonatal intensive care nurses had to carry the babies down nine flights of stairs, in the dark, squeezing oxygen into their lungs, to get them to safety.


And there were the three women from Jersey City Sandy Recovery, sinking in the proximity to the so many impressive people.


“I just shook Ruth Bader Ginsburg‘s hand,” exulted one of them, Candice Osborne. “How awesome!”


Entertainment News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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To Forgive Is Divine (Then Comes the Tax Bill)
















The people who brought you Occupy Wall Street have come up with an extremely clever idea: raising money to buy random citizens’ overdue debt, and then—poof!—forgive it. One day a debtor is fielding calls from a collection agency; the next day, she’s not.


If this vanishing act sounds too good to be true—and it might be, but we’ll get to that—it helps to start at the beginning. Debt is easiest to think about as a negative thing: It’s money you owe somebody. From that somebody’s perspective, though, debt is money coming due. That makes it an asset that can be bought and sold—at a discount based on the likelihood it will be repaid.













When debt becomes overdue, it gets cheaper, and when it becomes really overdue, it sells for pennies on the dollar. Whoever buys debt can do whatever they like with it—including forgive it. That’s the idea that Strike Debt, a group that grew out of the Occupy Wall Street movement, says it will put into practice with a project it calls the Rolling Jubilee. For every dollar contributed, the group expects to be able to buy and forgive $ 20 of distressed debt.


David Rees, a humorist best known for his Get Your War On comic and How to Sharpen Pencils book, wrote on his blog that Strike Debt has successfully tested the idea with a $ 500 purchase of $ 14,000 in debt, a ratio of 1 to 28. “Now, after many consultations with attorneys, the IRS, and our moles in the debt-brokerage world, we are ready to take the Rolling Jubilee program LIVE and NATIONWIDE,” Rees wrote, “buying debt in communities that have been struggling during the recession.” Strike Debt is advertising the effort as “a buyout of the people, by the people.”


It’s a laudable idea—although the $ 1 million target Strike Debt has floated amounts to a drop in the bucket of American consumers’ overall indebtedness, which stood at $ 11.38 trillion as of June 30, according (PDF) to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. (That’s actually a generous comparison, given standard measurements of drops and buckets.) So if this is a people’s bailout, it’s a symbolic one, dwarfed by the lifelines that major financial institutions got during the crisis.


Slate’s Matthew Yglesias quibbles that the Rolling Jubilee benefits people who have racked up debt while it ignores those who are simply poor. “Given two struggling families, one of which is indebted and one of which isn’t, it’s not clear why you’d think that the family that’s borrowed heavily in the past is more worthy of assistance,” he writes. “And similarly, for any particular indebted family it’s not obvious that on a dollar-per-dollar basis debt forgiveness is more helpful than just handing over some cash.”


This is all nitpicking, though, compared with the big, inevitable catch: taxes. A person’s debt can’t truly disappear with no consequences. The amount forgiven is technically income—“cancellation of debt income,” in Internal Revenue Service terms. It’s a dollar-for-dollar conversion, says Robert Willens, a tax expert based in New York. For example, a person with regular income of $ 50,000 who has $ 25,000 in credit-card debt discharged will be taxed on April 15 as if she earns $ 75,000.


“There’s not any doubt about the tax outcome at all,” says Willens. “That’s almost always the case with debt discharges—you wind up with this tax problem that almost always mitigates the benefit of the discharge.”


There are exceptions—such as when the taxpayer is insolvent, in which case taxes are only due on the amount of the forgiveness that exceeds her insolvency, says David Miller, a tax attorney at Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft. Bankruptcy is another exception.


Strike Debt didn’t make a representative available for an interview despite several requests, so I wasn’t able to ask about the particulars of who the group plans to buy debt from, or about its legal structure. Miller suggests that the group form a 501(c)3 organization that negotiates directly with credit-card companies on behalf of individual debtors and structures its payments as grants. Solvent people would still owe tax, but donors to the cause would be able to get a tax deduction. (Strike Debt, if you’re reading, Miller says he is happy to help you set up this structure pro bono.)


Credit scores also go down when debt is written off, as opposed to repaid.


David Graeber, whom Bloomberg Businessweek profiled as “the anti-leader of Occupy Wall Street” in an October 2011 cover story, wrote about the concept of jubilees in his book Debt: The First 5,000 Years. They’re rare today, but in ancient Babylon, Assyria, and Egypt, rulers regularly forgave their subjects’ debt during lean years as a means of staving off revolt.


A fundraiser to kick off the Rolling Jubilee is scheduled for Nov. 15 in New York, featuring Janeane Garofalo, Max Silvestri, Jeff Mangum, Tunde Adebimpe, and other artists. The cheapest ticket goes for $ 25 (enough to erase $ 500 in debt).


Businessweek.com — Top News



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Clarke’s 218 puts Australia on front foot
















BRISBANE (Reuters) – Australia captain Michael Clarke scored a brilliant unbeaten double century to give the hosts a remarkable 37-run first innings lead on the fourth day of the first test against South Africa on Monday.


Supported first by a maiden century from opener Ed Cowan in a record stand of 259, and then by Mike Hussey‘s 86 not out, Clarke’s 218 helped lift Australia from 40 for three when he took to the crease on Sunday to 487 for four when stumps were drawn.













It was Clarke’s sixth test century, and his third double hundred, in the 15 tests since he was named captain last year in the wake of the Ashes humiliation and Australia’s quarter-final exit at the World Cup.


Although by no means a chanceless knock, the 31-year-old played with patience when South Africa’s vaunted pacemen got anything out of the Gabba track before punishing anything loose with some fine shot-making.


When he carried his bat back to the pavilion at the end of the day to the raucous cheers of a sparse crowd at the famous Brisbane ground, Clarke had faced 350 balls over 504 minutes and scored 21 fours.


“I’m very happy with that,” Clarke, who accumulated his 1,000 test run of the year during the innings, said in an interview on the boundary.


“I didn’t feel great at the start and I think Ed Cowan batted beautifully.


“We’re in a great position with a 30-odd lead. I’d like another 70 odd runs in the morning and then I want to have a crack with the ball. We’ll see what happens.”


Cowan departed for 136 in heartbreaking fashion just before tea, run out at the non-striker’s end when Dale Steyn got a finger to a Clarke drive that hit the stumps and the opener was caught out of his crease backing up.


RECORD PARTNERSHIP


His partnership with Clarke was an Australian record for the fourth wicket at the Gabba, beating the 245 Clarke and Mike Hussey made against Sri Lanka in 2007.


Cowan’s wicket was the only wicket to fall on the day and Hussey started pouring on the runs as if determined to get the record back for his own partnership with his captain.


The 37-year-old bucked his poor recent form against South Africa by reaching his half century off just 68 balls with a drive through long-off and was closing on a century of his own when play ended.


It was Hussey’s cut four off Morne Morkel with which Australia overhauled South Africa’s first innings tally of 450 and put themselves in with an unlikely chance of even winning a test which lost an entire day to rain on Saturday.


Clarke’s negotiation of the “nervous nineties” for his century had been fraught and he was nearly run out going for a second run that would have brought him to the hundred mark.


There were no such jitters on his approach to the two hundred mark, which he passed by slapping the ball through mid-on for two runs before giving the badge on his helmet another kiss.


Cowan’s century was a retort to those critics who have consistently questioned his place in the team since he made his debut in last year’s Melbourne test against India.


The 30-year-old lefthander reached the mark two overs after lunch by pulling a short Vernon Philander delivery for four to the square leg boundary, beginning his joyous celebrations before the ball hit the rope.


South Africa’s number one test ranking is on the line in the series, which continues with matches in Adelaide and Perth after Brisbane.


Australia / Antarctica News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Pedometers play up every step you take
















NEW YORK (Reuters) – Pedometers have ticked off many miles since Leonardo da Vinci sketched his version, essentially a pendulum for walkers, in the 15th century.


While step counting will never be a magic fitness pill, experts say this most pedestrian of gadgets can put extra spring in an ambulatory routine.













“Just as a watch can’t make a person be on time, a pedometer can’t make a person active,” said Dr. Barbara Bushman, an exercise specialist and personal trainer with the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM). “But it’s a good tool for promoting physical activity.”


Bushman said research has shown that in various populations, wearing a pedometer helps with weight loss, as well as encouraging focus on physical activity.


A summary of 26 different studies showed that pedometer users walked at least 2,000 more steps each day than nonusers, according to the Harvard Health Letter, produced by experts at Harvard Medical School. Also, using a pedometer helped them increase overall physical activity levels by 27 percent.


For most healthy adults, 10,000 steps per day is a reasonable goal, according to ACSM.


Bushman recommends pedometers as an adjunct to activity and notes that old-fashioned pedometers can be an inexact measure of exercise volume. Position also matters.


“Tilting, angling, placing it off the body or on a loose waistband can affect accuracy,” she said, noting the devices don’t pick up non-ambulatory activities, such as stationary cycling or rowing.


She did a study with third-graders who wore the pedometers to encourage them to be more active during recess.


“But they figured out if they just jiggled in the seat they could trick the counter,” she said. “It did make them fidget more.”


INCREASING FITNESS AWARENESS


To test the accuracy of a pedometer, Bushman suggests, count out 20 paces. If the counter reads within 18 to 22, it’s considered a reasonably accurate step counter.


Gregory Chertok, a sport psychology counselor and fitness trainer at the Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Center in Englewood, New Jersey, said studies show that just wearing a pedometer can increase fitness awareness.


“A pedometer is almost like a workout buddy, an ever-present truth teller,” he said. “It provides constant, immediate feedback, and so acts as a behavior modification tool.”


There is also the power of numbers.


“Most goals people set are measurable, numeric, so just having the number can encourage you to set your own goal,” he said.


Chertok added that pedometers also help people realize that everyday activities, such as walking up stairs or through supermarket aisles, count toward that goal.


MONITORING PROGRESS


“Accountability is a big issue,” Chertok explained, “accountability and social support.”


Just as working out in groups increases exercise adherence, he suggests, a pedometer can be effective because people know they are being monitored, even if you’re monitoring yourself.


To build a better pedometer, companies are moving from the spring-load, or old-fashioned, to microchip.


Garmin Ltd’s 201 model is a wrist unit that uses GPS satellites to trace your outdoor workout. Besides showing speed, distance, pace, time and laps, it can even point you back to your starting place.


Using MEMS (microelectromechanical systems) technology, the technology in very small devices, Striiv is among the companies making pedometers that are smarter and contain no moving parts.


“It’s the next generation,” said Dave Wang, chief executive of the Redwood City, California-based company.


The new technology, he maintains, improves stepping accuracy to within one percent of every 100 steps on normal terrain.


Last month the company rolled out a free iPhone app that can be used alone or in conjunction with its Play Smart Pedometer that enables users to compete in various games and challenges via Facebook and email.


The new generation of pedometers can track running, and even climbing, but calories remain the final frontier.


“Calories are a little hard,” Wang admits, although his pedometers do take a stab at it.


“We look at your height, your weight, your gender, your age, your cadence, your altimeter increase if you’re walking up a hill,” he said. “But at the end of the day … it’s a guess.”


(Editing by Patricia Reaney and Jeffrey Benkoe)


Health News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Condom conundrum: Porn industry ponders latex law
















LOS ANGELES (AP) — The show must go on, is the entertainer’s credo, and it did just that in the nation’s Porn Capital even after Los Angeles County voted to require performers to use condoms when filming sex scenes.


One of the industry’s biggest stars, James Deen, reported for work, condom-free as usual, just hours after voters adopted the new law.













During a break in the action Thursday, however, Deen raised the same questions on the mind of everyone in LA’s billion-dollar-plus porn industry: Can a planned court challenge get the new law tossed out before it is even implemented? Or, perhaps this time next year, will he be making films like “Atomic Vixens” and “Asian Fever Sex Objects” in some place like Las Vegas or Florida?


The law, listed on the ballot as Measure B, was passed by 56 percent of voters Tuesday. It won’t take effect until election results are certified, which likely will be several more days. It could take months longer before county health officials decide how to enforce it and whether they must begin dispatching prophylactic police officers to keep a close eye on actors.


The Department of Public Health issued a terse statement with no timetable for developing an enforcement plan. There was no hint of whether there would be surprise inspections or if public employees would be paid to watch porn flicks to see if actors were complying.


The nation’s adult entertainment industry, which is believed to generate as much as $ 7 billion a year in revenue, according to the trade publication Adult Video News, vigorously opposed the new law. It argued it is unneeded because of safeguards that include monthly venereal disease checks for all working actors.


They also maintained it would be costly and difficult to enforce and could drive the business out of Los Angeles‘ sprawling San Fernando Valley, taking with it as many as 10,000 jobs, including actors, directors, film editors and crafts and makeup people.


The main problem, they say, is that fans don’t want to see actors using condoms.


“The last time we attempted to go all condom, our industry lost sales by over 30 percent,” said Deen. “That’s a huge hit to our economy.”


Deen, who has appeared in more than 1,000 hardcore films over the past nine years and estimates he’s been in about 4,000 sex scenes, said he’s never been infected with any disease and he gets tested every two weeks.


“I love condoms, I think they’re great and the safest thing you can do in engaging in sexual intercourse with a stranger,” he said, adding he uses them in his personal life but not onscreen.


Industry officials, meanwhile, say the last reported case of HIV linked directly to work was in 2004. Since then, they add, about 300,000 films have been made.


Michael Weinstein, the nonprofit AIDS Healthcare Foundation’s founder and president, disputes those figures, saying there have been other, more recent HIV infections, not to mention numerous cases of gonorrhea, chlamydia and other sexually transmitted diseases.


Weinstein, whose group led a petition campaign to place the measure on the ballot, says he plans to take his campaign statewide.


In the meantime, he says implementing and enforcing the new law should be easy.


“This is no different than supervising restaurants or nail salons or barbershops,” Weinstein said. “You fill out forms, you are granted a permit and, periodically, somebody goes out and does spot inspections.”


Easy to implement or not, porn producers say the cost of paying for permits will likely be steep and the drop-off in sales could bankrupt them.


“Certainly this is the biggest threat that I’ve seen to the industry in a very, very long time,” said Steven Hirsch, chief executive of Vivid Entertainment Group, one of the largest purveyors of porn films, including celebrity sex tapes and popular X-rated parodies of “Batman” and “Superman” films. “There have been obscenity prosecutions, but this is something on a whole different level.”


Hirsch, who co-founded Vivid 28 years ago, said he is confident the industry will get the law overturned on the grounds it violates filmmakers’ First Amendment rights of free expression.


If it isn’t overturned, he said his company will simply move production out of Los Angeles County to survive.


Several people who attended an emergency meeting of the industry’s advocacy group, the Free Speech Coalition, last week, said porn producers have already been in touch with officials in Las Vegas and parts of Florida. In some instances, they said, tax incentives have been offered to lure them.


Through a quirk in county law, the industry might even be able to pack up and move just a few miles down the freeway to Pasadena or Long Beach.


Those municipalities, although located in Los Angeles County, have their own health departments, and Pasadena said earlier this week it won’t enforce the new law.


That would be just fine for many actors and directors, who say they don’t really want to leave their home base.


“People forget that porn people are people too,” said Kylie Ireland, a veteran actress and director who has appeared in such films as “Being Porn Again” and “Calipornication.”


“They forget that we have families and we are married and we have kids and we have lives and jobs and hobbies just like everybody else.”


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Badlands Crude
















2f921  feature reservation46  01  inline202 Badlands CrudePhotograph by Ben GriemeTex Hall, head of three affiliated tribes, runs an oil empire in the Dakotas


Tex Hall strolls across a parking lot at the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation in North Dakota and enters the tribe’s administrative headquarters. Hall, 56, is wearing jeans, cowboy boots, and an ornate silver belt buckle the size of a tortoise shell. He removes his sunglasses. Inside, the tribal business chamber has the air of a bustling county courthouse. Hall is the reservation’s top elected leader, chairman of the 12,000 members of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nation (also known as the Three Affiliated Tribes). Over the past century, Fort Berthold has struggled with poverty and high unemployment, but recently its fortunes have been on the upswing. The reservation has struck oil.













Fort Berthold, which covers an area slightly larger than Rhode Island, sits above the Williston Basin, a geologic formation rich in shale oil. About five years ago, engineers figured out how to extract the oil using hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, techniques. Since 2008, according to tribal records, more than $ 500 million in oil revenue from fracking leasing rights and royalties has flowed into Fort Berthold.


2f921  1108 feature rezmap inline Badlands Crude


North Dakota’s economy has erupted. Unemployment hovers around 3 percent. There are overrun trailer parks, six-figure trucking jobs, rollicking strip clubs, and scores of real estate operatives furtively scouring land records in search of untapped treasures. Four years ago there were no producing oil wells on Fort Berthold. Now there are 297, with hundreds more expected in the coming years. Entrepreneurs are clamoring to conduct business with the tribe. To operate on the reservation, however, they are supposed to get the approval of the Tribal Business Council—MHA Nation’s top governing body—which consists of Chairman Hall and six other elected officials.


The council convenes just one day a month. Not long ago, the infrequent meetings were well suited to the sleepy economy. But in the current fevered atmosphere, the council’s scarcity of face time has transformed the gatherings into a kind of high-anxiety endurance challenge, testing how badly outsiders want to win access to the reservation and to what extent tribe members can influence the oil boom. Whatever the future of the reservation looks like, it will be won or lost here.


On the morning of the council’s meeting in July, some of the several dozen visitors who had arrived from around the country had shown up an hour prior to the 10 a.m. start.


An hour passed. Then two. Finally, at 12:20, Hall strolls into the chamber, passing a poster at the front of the room advertising the tribe’s annual oil and gas expo. “Today’s Modern Day Gold Rush,” it reads. “The Dream Starts Here.” The sometimes messy reality of oil exploration starts here, too. Hall settles into his seat, front and center, and calls the meeting to order.


In recent years, as the revenue from Native American casinos has flatlined in the face of competition from other forms of legalized gambling, tribes around the country have grappled with a difficult question: to drill or not to drill? Hall is one of the country’s leading advocates for native oil exploration. “The economic benefits of this oil and gas development are far-reaching,” he testified before the U.S. Congress in July.


Through Glenda Embry, the tribe’s public information officer, Hall agreed to an interview, which he later postponed. Several subsequent attempts made through Embry to reschedule the interview were unsuccessful.


With the influx of money, scores of problems have bubbled up with the crude, including lawsuits, environmental scares, and questions about where the money is going. Tribe members say their local government is rife with conflicts of interest, and across the reservation feelings of injustice run high. “This case focuses on a new version of a very old story: the misappropriation of land resources belonging to Native Americans,” alleges one lawsuit pitting tribe members against the federal government. “Present circumstances confirm what history has repeatedly shown: the bigger the prize, the more egregious the land grab.”
 
 
Inside the tribal business chamber, Ramona Two Shields addresses the tribe members. Before retiring, Two Shields spent several decades working for the U.S. Navy. These days she leads a group of elders preaching fiscal discipline to the council and suing the U.S. Department of the Interior, which oversees reservations. “If you sit back and say nothing,” says Two Shields, “they are going to use all of this money.”


In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the federal government divvied up the reservation into a patchwork of 160- and 320-acre allotments that were given to individual members of the tribe. At first, the tribe itself owned little land. But over the years, as families looked to sell their homes and move off the reservation, the tribal government stepped in as a buyer, gradually accumulating more property.


The oil boom has divided Fort Berthold, culturally and economically, into those who own land (typically older tribe members who inherited property from their parents) and those who don’t. “That’s a new phenomenon for us,” says Marilyn Hudson, a landowner who serves as administrator at the tribe’s history museum. “Previously we were a homogeneous society.” Those who don’t own land now increasingly look to the Tribal Business Council for support. At the moment, the tribe owns the mineral rights on 108,775 of the 552,812 acres within the producing regions of the reservation. Many of the parcels are gushing oil. From January 2008 to July 2012, the tribal government accumulated $ 53 million in bonus payments and an additional $ 64 million in royalties. Each month millions more roll in.


Hall championed the creation of the People’s Fund, a pool of money designed to periodically distribute cash back to the tribe’s members. He says it has $ 30 million. Four years into the oil boom, the People’s Fund has yet to make any disbursements. Many residents see the oil boom as the tribe’s last great hope for economic salvation. “We really need to develop a long-term vision for a generation beyond us,” says Hudson. “Because we all know once the oil is gone, it’s gone.”2f921  feature reservation46  02  inline405 Badlands CrudePhotograph by Ben GriemeDrilling at the reservation has brought more than $ 500 million in revenue since 2008
 
 
Those who do own land have profited from the boom, though even many of them feel they’ve been cheated. In the fall of 2007, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), acting in an oversight role as a trustee of the reservation, began auctioning off Fort Berthold’s mineral rights. Individual landowners could accept or reject the oil companies’ offers. Many happily took the money.


Years later some landowners have soured on the deals. “We pleaded with [the BIA] to hold the mineral lease auctions down in Houston, Texas, or Denver, Colorado, or Billings, Montana, so the big oil companies could bid. Instead they held them in New Town, N.D., with very little advertisement, and only the small speculators came to bid,” writes landowner Nelson Birdbear. “My minerals were leased. But it could have been a lot better.”


In the summer of 2011, Two Shields became the lead plaintiff in a class action in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims alleging that the Department of the Interior had failed in its fiduciary duty to properly manage the reservation’s mineral rights. The suit alleges that the BIA auctioned off mineral leases at submarket rates. “The BIA merely rubber-stamped the bids from the oil companies that obtained these supercheap leases,” reads the complaint. “The BIA did so knowing that many (if not most) allottees are poor, had no experience with leasing, and were glad to get a little money.”


Lawyers for the defense have moved to dismiss the suit, arguing that it amounts to redundant litigation because the plaintiffs are already participants in a similar class action against the federal government. The lawsuit is ongoing.


Two Shields warns that the payments from the People’s Fund might never materialize unless the tribe comes up with a fiscal plan. But in recent years the state of the tribe’s finances has remained a mystery to most members. Hudson says that while Hall’s administration regularly shares data on incoming oil revenue down to the penny, they offer no detailed information about how the money is being spent. “We are an Indian chartered corporation, and we are corporate stockholders,” she says. “We should be getting statements and annual reports.” Neither Hall nor Embry would respond to questions about fiscal transparency. In the absence of financial reports, misgivings have flourished—particularly about the chairman’s privately held oil company.
 
 
Growing up on Fort Berthold, Hall dreamed of playing professional basketball. When that didn’t pan out, he earned a master’s degree in education administration and worked in the reservation’s school system, according to the tribe’s website.


Along the way, Hall discovered a gift for politics. In 1998 and 2002 he won back-to-back elections for tribal chairman. Under his administration, the tribe invested in economic development projects, including a buffalo ranch. In 2004 state authorities swooped in to investigate reports that the tribe’s bison were dying of malnutrition. One local resident told the Associated Press that the conditions were “worse than a concentration camp.” At the time, a spokesperson for Hall denied any mismanagement. In 2006, amid allegations of fiscal irresponsibility from his challenger, Marcus Wells, he was voted out of office.


In the fall of 2007, according to state records, Hall formed an oilfield subcontractor company, Maheshu Energy, designed to sell supplies such as casing pipes to energy companies drilling on the reservation. He didn’t stay away from politics for long. In 2010 he again ran for chairman. He was reelected.


For the past two years, while managing the tribe’s collective oil interests, hosting commercial oil and gas expos, and testifying in Washington about the benefits of native oil exploration, Hall has continued to run Maheshu Energy. The dual role has drawn criticism. In May 2011, Steve Kelly, a tribe member who operates a handful of oil-related businesses, appeared at a council meeting and argued that tribal law required the chairman to either eliminate his economic stake in the oil field or abstain from voting on oil-related matters. “I don’t mind competition,” said Kelly. “But I can’t compete with the chairman.”


Hank Bolman, the owner of a roustabout business, which provides oil companies with myriad maintenance services in the field, then accused the chairman of “writing letters out to different companies, threatening them—‘you have to use my pipe or you don’t come on the reservation land.’ ” The chairman denied writing any such letters. He recommended the business owners take their complaints to the tribal ethics committee. Kelly pointed out that in practice the committee didn’t really exist; the council had never appointed anyone to sit on it. Reached by phone in July, Kelly says the conflict was never settled. According to Kelly, Maheshu Energy, which started in oil pipes, has since expanded into a diverse range of oilfield services. “He has his fingers in everything,” says Kelly. Neither Hall nor Embry responded to questions about Maheshu Energy and concerns over the chairman’s potential conflict of interest. At the May 2011 meeting, Hall said: “It’s about being able to do the work, keep a contract.”
 
 
Richard Mayer runs Thunder Butte Petroleum Services, a company owned by the tribe that intends to build a refinery on the reservation. Mayer calls it part of a plan to create jobs, turn a profit, and free the tribe from federal handouts. He says the construction of the refinery will cost roughly $ 300 million to $ 320 million and take 18 to 24 months. (It’s not clear what Maheshu Energy’s role in the refinery is because Hall didn’t respond to questions.) The current plan, says Mayer, is to build a refinery that will take 15,000 barrels per day of local crude and turn it into diesel fuel and naphtha, an oil product often used as a gasoline additive.


Last year major energy companies were racing to exit the refinery business. Recently, however, the prospects for fuel makers have improved, thanks to lower oil prices. Mayer says he expects the refinery to be immediately profitable. “The very first year in operation, we will be contributing to the tribe,” he says.


Critics say that if things could go so wrong at a buffalo ranch, they wonder what might happen at a complex refinery. Mayer downplays the concerns. “I’ve lived here my whole life,” he says. “I have children that live here. My No. 1 concern is safety.”


Four years into the boom, some residents say they have yet to see much upside. Lisa DeVille, 38, a tribe member who lives on Fort Berthold in the small town of Mandaree, recently conducted a survey of her neighbors about the quality of life. The results, she says, revealed widespread concerns about increased crime, overcrowded roads, and environmental degradation.


DeVille says that since 2009 there have been roughly 70 reports of oil-related pollution at Fort Berthold. She worries that if there is ever a major accident, the tribe won’t have the infrastructure in place to respond adequately.


Many locals already feel endangered by the surge in truck traffic on the reservation. The steep roads that cut through the hilly Badlands tend to be a single lane in either direction with no shoulders. Each new oil well requires hundreds of visits from large trucks, which now routinely race up and down the hills, hauling in water and equipment and carrying out the oil. In September 2011 a semi passing through the area collided with a pickup driven by a local family, killing four passengers, including two young girls ages two and five.


The reservation has an outpatient health clinic but no hospital. The nearest emergency rooms are 100 miles away. DeVille says many residents were hoping the boom would result in better community health services. But like most upgrades at Fort Berthold, they’re something tribe members have yet to see. “Where’s all the money going?” asks DeVille.
 
 
Back at the council meeting, Hall announces a brief recess at 3 o’clock. Fifteen minutes later he’s sitting shotgun in a passenger van, his cowboy hat resting on the dashboard. In the back, staring out the windows, are visiting regulators from the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. The van rumbles down a dirt road and turns into a drill site. The visitors are greeted by a convoy of friendly oilmen from WPX Energy, a Tulsa-based company, and from Halliburton, which is fracking two wells there.


A Halliburton employee leads the group on a tour, past a seesawing pump-jack and dozens of noisy fracking vehicles painted bright red. At one point everyone pauses for photos. For once at Fort Berthold, there’s no hint of tension between the Native Americans, the oil companies, and the federal regulators. Everyone smiles. Later, Hall’s administration will post some of the photos on the tribe’s website.


As the tour winds down, the guide invites Hall and his guests to a cookout. By this point the chairman is again running way behind schedule. The meeting was supposed to resume at 3:30 p.m. It’s nearly 5. “Well, what do you guys have?” asks Hall. “Steak,” says the man from Halliburton. Soon, everybody is sitting around a picnic table enjoying a gratis supper.


Shortly after 6 p.m., the chairman resumes the council meeting. The rush of business proposals continues. Hamburgers are served. A team of architects from Minnesota presents designs for an expansive tribal government center, which Hall’s administration is planning to erect nearby. The monthly meetings, Hall explains, have grown too crowded. The total projected costs, according to the architects, will be in the range of $ 39 million to $ 44 million. “Is there a basketball court in there?” says Hall, smiling.


A couple more hours pass. Eventually, a staff member informs the remaining visitors that they must step outside so the council can conduct a closed-door session to review new hires. He assures everyone that afterward the agenda will march forward. The guests wearily decamp to an adjacent lobby. They have come long distances for a few minutes of the chairman’s time. At midnight, they’re still waiting.


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