Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Senate panel peels back Apple's offshore taxes

By Patrick Temple-West

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Apple Inc's chief executive officer defended the company's tax record at a Tuesday Senate hearing where lawmakers said the maker of iPads, iPods and Mac computers kept billions of dollars in profits in Irish subsidiaries to avoid U.S. taxes.

The hearing marked another foray by the Senate's most powerful investigative committee into corporate offshore tax avoidance, which is increasingly a target of many governments from the United States to Western Europe.

Senator Carl Levin, who has led several probes into offshore tax issues as chairman of the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, said Apple shifted billions of dollars in profits offshore to avoid U.S. taxes on a massive scale.

In 2012 alone, Levin said, Apple avoided paying $9 billion in U.S. taxes.

Apple CEO Tim Cook said at the hearing that his company was a major U.S. taxpayer, handing over nearly $6 billion in cash to the federal government in 2012.

"We expect to pay even more this year," Cook said in his first congressional testimony since becoming CEO in 2011.

"We pay all the taxes we owe," he said. "We don't depend on tax gimmicks. We don't move intellectual property offshore and use it to sell our products back to the United States to avoid taxes. We don't stash money on some Caribbean island."

Cash-strapped governments worldwide are trying to wring more tax revenue from companies whose interests in many countries enable them to shift capital and assets across borders. Critics say the companies exploit tax loopholes. (Video factbox: http://r.reuters.com/qej38t)

MCCAIN FAULTS TAX SYSTEM

"Closing these kinds of unjustified loopholes could provide hundreds of billions of dollars to reduce the deficit and avert damaging budget cuts," Levin, a Democrat, said at the hearing.

"We should close them and dedicate the revenue that generates to these important priorities, whether or not we reform the overall tax code," he said.

Senator John McCain praised Apple as an American business success story, but he said the company's tax strategy reflected a "flawed" tax system.

"For years, Apple has opted to forego fully contributing to the U.S. Treasury and to American society by shifting profits and circumventing U.S. taxes," McCain said.

Levin's panel issued a report saying that Apple used three subsidiaries with no "tax residency" in Ireland, where they are incorporated, or in the United States, where corporate executives manage those companies.

The main subsidiary, a holding company that includes Apple's retail stores throughout Europe, has not paid any corporate income tax in the last five years, the subcommittee said.

The Levin inquiry comes at a turbulent time in tax circles, with the U.S. Internal Revenue Service under investigation because of the way agents handled conservative political groups' applications for tax-exempt status.

It is not clear, however, whether that controversy and Levin's allegations will lead to an overhaul of the U.S. tax code. Tax law writers in Congress had been inching forward on such a project before the IRS scandal erupted earlier this month. Levin's inquiry has been under way for months.

Subcommittee staffers said on Monday that Apple was not breaking any laws and had cooperated fully with the inquiry.

Shares of Apple were down 0.2 percent at $442.10 in midday trading.

(Writing by Kevin Drawbaugh; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/apple-congress-spar-over-taxes-ahead-tuesday-hearing-114056185.html

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Appeals court strikes down Arizona ban on abortions at 20 weeks

By Dan Whitcomb

(Reuters) - A federal appeals court struck down an Arizona law on Tuesday that bans abortions from 20 weeks gestation, saying it violated "unalterably clear" U.S. Supreme Court rulings that women have a right to terminate pregnancies until a fetus is viable.

The decision by a three-member panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of appeals in San Francisco, which overturned the ruling of a federal district court judge, was hailed by abortion rights groups as a "huge victory" in a state they say has taken one of the nation's toughest stances on the issue.

"Last year, Arizona led the nation in the number of legislative attacks against women's health care," Nancy Northrup, president of the Center for Reproductive Rights, said in a statement.

"With today's defeat in federal court, we call on the governor and legislature to stop wasting Arizona taxpayers' time and money on these cruel and extremely harmful efforts to chip away at women's constitutionally protected rights," she said.

A spokesman for Arizona Governor Jan Brewer, a Republican who signed the abortion ban into law in April 2012, said Brewer was disappointed in the ruling.

"As a strong defender of life and the unborn, Governor Brewer stands behind the action she took by signing this legislation into law," Matthew Benson, Brewer's director of communications, said. "She is not a party to this case, but would be supportive of any efforts to appeal today's misguided ruling."

Cathi Herrod, president of the anti-abortion Center for Arizona Policy said the appellate court had "put a pro-abortion ideology before the health and safety of women and preborn children."

"Ultimately, as we've anticipated from the beginning, this case should be decided by the United States Supreme Court. Sadly, until that time, women and preborn children will suffer the consequences of this disappointing decision," she said.

ARIZONA NOT ALONE IN RESTRICTING ABORTIONS

The U.S. Supreme Court legalized abortion nationwide in 1973, but lawmakers in more conservative states have enacted laws that seek to place restrictions on the procedure in recent years, especially on late-term abortions.

The Arizona law prohibits physicians from carrying out abortions starting at 20 weeks of pregnancy, except in medical emergencies, and could send doctors who perform them to jail. Late-term abortions remain relatively rare.

Abortion rights groups had said that the Arizona measure was more extreme than similar laws in other states because the way Arizona measures gestation means it would bar abortions two weeks earlier than in other states.

Those states also set the limit at 20 weeks but have different ways to calculate gestation time. Arizona already bans abortions at the point of viability, when a fetus might survive outside the womb, generally at 23 to 24 weeks.

Three abortion providers challenged the law in court. Last August, the 9th Circuit blocked the law from going into effect, pending a ruling on the appeal.

Several states have recently enacted restrictive bans on abortion, led by a bill in North Dakota that bans abortion once a fetal heartbeat can be detected, as early as six weeks. The state's governor, Jack Dalrymple, said when he signed the bill into law in March that it remained in question whether it would survive a court challenge.

Last week, a federal judge temporarily halted a new Arkansas law that bans most abortions after the 12th week of pregnancy.

(Additional reporting by David Schwartz in Phoenix; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Leslie Adler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/appeals-court-strikes-down-arizona-ban-abortions-20-225233422.html

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Witnesses describe deadly Oklahoma tornado: ?All you could hear were screams?

Two men stand in front of Plaza Towers Elementary after a tornado destroyed the school on Monday. (Bryan Terry/AP/The??

[Updated at 10:47 a.m. CT]

MOORE, Okla. ? The hell he saw was harrowing, but it?s the sounds at Plaza Towers Elementary that Stuart Earnest Jr. says will haunt him forever.

?All you could hear were screams,? Earnest said. ?The people screaming for help. And the people trying to help were also screaming.?

Plaza Towers, a pre-kindergarten through sixth-grade school, took a direct hit when a titanic tornado chewed a deadly and destructive 20-mile path through Newcastle, Moore and parts of southern Oklahoma City for 40 minutes Monday afternoon.

State officials have adjusted the number of casualties a few times since the tragedy. Tuesday morning, Reuters quoted Amy Elliott, chief administrative officer at the Oklahoma City Medical Examiner's Office, as saying the death toll had been reduced to 24 for now.

"There was a lot of chaos," Elliott said.

Officials said some of the dead are children. KFOR reported that at least 233 people were injured by the storm.

"Not to be pessimistic... but we think the death toll will continue to climb as we find more bodies," Lt. Gov. Todd Lamb said on CNN Tuesday morning.

President Barack Obama said FEMA officials and staff were on the ground in the area, and that the federal government would help with the disaster response. "The people of Moore should know that their country will remain on the ground there for them, beside them, as long as it takes for their homes and schools to rebuild, businesses and hospitals to reopen, the parents to console, the first responders to comfort and of course frightened children who will need our continued love and attention," Obama said Tuesday morning at a press conference.

Classes were still in session at Plaza Towers when the twister, estimated to be packing winds of 200 mph or greater, crushed nearly every corner of the school. Teachers? cars were thrown into the building, and the playground no longer exists.

?I can only hope those little kids killed didn't suffer,? said Earnest, one of many who rushed to the school to help survivors.

[In tornado's wake, worried parents seek out kids]

With several students still unaccounted for, rescuers worked overnight digging through the rubble.

?I just hope they find her,? Shannon Galarneau said of her 10-year-old niece, a Plaza Towers student who was missing as of early Tuesday morning. ?You just feel helpless.?

The girl's younger sister, also a student at the school, suffered cuts to her head and bruises on her back. The 8-year-old was still wearing her hospital bracelet while asleep on her grandmother's shoulder in the front seat of a pickup truck just after midnight.

?She said it was probably the scariest day of her life,? Galarneau said.

The child was among more than 230 reportedly injured by the tornado, which some estimated to be greater than a mile wide at times. Its path was nearly identical to the one taken by a record-breaking May 1999 tornado that devastated the area.

Galarneau and her husband could see the twister a mile and a half from their front porch and scrambled to hide.

?It barreled down fast,? said Galarneau, who found refuge in a utility closet.

[How to Help: Oklahoma storms]

President Barack Obama declared several Oklahoma counties disaster areas and pledged to support the area's rescue and recovery. The funnel?s fury crumbled homes for several blocks around the school and in other parts of Moore. Missing street signs and other landmarks made some neighborhoods unrecognizable even to locals.

?It is a barren wasteland,? Galarneau said. ?Everything is leveled.?

Allen and JoAnn Anderson huddled under quilts and pillows in their bathtub with their Yorkie, Magand, and cat, Meow, when the tornado came down their street.

?It was like standing in the middle of a train track and having the train go right over you,? said Allen, 63.

They emerged from the tub 15 minutes later to find their brick house gone and cars badly damaged.

?There?s no house. It?s just a pile of rubble,? Allen said.

The couple checked into a motel with their pets late Monday. Chunks of attic insulation were still stuck in JoAnn?s sandy-blond hair, and her legs were partially caked in dried mud.

?It could be worse,? JoAnn said. ?We're alive.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/witnesses-describle-deadly-oklahoma-tornado-demolished-school-111345116.html

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Karzai seeks Indian military aid amid Pakistan row

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) ? Afghan President Hamid Karzai will seek increased military aid from India during a three-day visit starting Monday and will discuss recent cross-border clashes with Pakistan, India's archrival, an aide said.

The comments follow a weekend report by the Times of India that said Afghanistan's ambassador to India had said the country needs India's help with "equipment and weapons to fight." The Press Trust of India later quoted a spokesman for New Delhi's Foreign Ministry as saying the country is ready to meet any such request.

"Yes, we will ask for assistance for the strengthening of our security forces," Karzai spokesman Aimal Faizi said in a briefing ahead of the trip. He did not comment on the Indian reports.

Karzai's visit could irk Pakistan, especially if any arms deal materializes. Pakistan considers Afghanistan its own backyard and suspects rival India of seeking greater influence there as a strategy to hem in the country from both sides. Pakistan and India have fought three wars since they were divided into two countries when they gained independence from Britain in 1947.

Afghanistan and India signed a strategic partnership agreement in 2011 that has included Indian military training of Afghan security forces. Faizi indicated in Saturday's briefing that Karzai would seek to expand that cooperation. "Whatever our Afghan security forces would need for assistance and help, India would help us," he said.

Afghan analyst Wadir Safi, a political science professor at Kabul University, says the timing of Karzai's India trip is likely related to recent border skirmishes with Pakistan.

Each side has been accusing the other of firing across the mountainous border region for months, including a skirmish earlier this month that killed an Afghan border policeman. Both countries have also accused each other of providing shelter for insurgents fighting on the other side of the border.

Afghan accusations that Pakistan is allegedly trying to torpedo efforts to start peace talks with the Taliban have also contributed to deteriorating relations. Pakistan is considered crucial to nudging Taliban leaders, many of which are in hiding in Pakistan, to the table ? a key goal of the United States and its allies ahead of the final pullout of foreign combat forces by the end of next year.

Karzai has long been deeply suspicious of the motives of Pakistan's government and military, which backed the Taliban regime before it was toppled in the 2001 U.S.-led intervention and has since seemed unable or unwilling to go after militant leaders taking refuge inside its borders. The killing of al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden in Pakistan only strengthened Afghan wariness of his neighbor.

Any increased military cooperation with India would likely only contribute to tensions, Safi warned. Afghanistan had been a proxy battleground for Pakistan and India during the war between the Pakistani-backed Taliban regime and the India-supported Northern Alliance.

Another Afghan analyst, Hamidullah Farooqi, said he thinks the reports of India supplying weapons are simply brinkmanship and, at most, India might agree to help Afghanistan upgrade old Soviet-era weaponry.

"An arms deal with India would not be helpful for regional stability or for the balance that Afghanistan needs between India and Pakistan," Farooqi said. "This is just a political game. I don't think there will be an arms deal."

Aside from regional strategic rivalries, Karzai is expected to discuss economic issues and will visit an engineering university where he will receive an honorary degree, Faizi said.

India has invested more than $2 billion in Afghan infrastructure, including highways and hospitals and rural electricity projects. New Delhi is hoping to gain some influence in the country after 2014, when Afghan forces become responsible for the entire country's security.

Karzai, who earned his college degree in India, has visited New Delhi more than a half dozen times in the past few years, most recently in November 2012.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/karzai-seeks-indian-military-aid-amid-pakistan-row-103234707.html

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AP chief says phone probe makes news sources reluctant to talk

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Justice Department's seizure of phone records for journalists at the Associated Press is hurting the agency's ability to gather news, the wire service's Chief Executive and President Gary Pruitt said on Sunday.

"Officials that would normally talk to us and people we talk to in the normal course of news gathering are already saying to us that they're a little reluctant to talk to us," Pruitt said on CBS's "Face The Nation" program. "They fear that they will be monitored by the government."

The Justice Department told the AP on May 10 that it had earlier seized records of more than 20 of its phone lines for April and May 2012. The seizure was part of an investigation of media leaks about a foiled terrorism plot.

"Approximately a hundred journalists use these telephone lines as part of news gathering," Pruitt said. "And over the course of the two months of the records that they swept up, thousands upon thousands of news-gathering calls were made."

The White House has said that President Barack Obama learned about the Justice Department's record seizure from press reports and had no prior knowledge of the action. Obama's administration is fielding concerns on several incidents that raise questions about its transparency.

Pruitt said the Justice Department claimed an exception to its own rules that required them to notify the AP of such a record seizure by saying that such a disclosure would have posed a substantial threat to the investigation.

"But they have not explained why it would and we can't understand why it would," Pruitt said. "We never even had possession of these records, they were in the possession of our telephone service company and they couldn't be tampered with."

Government officials have told Reuters that the AP phone records were just one element in an ongoing sweeping U.S. government investigation into media leaks about a Yemen-based plot to bomb a U.S. airliner, prompted by a May 7, 2012 AP story about the operation to foil the plot.

"We don't question their right to conduct these sort of investigations," Pruitt said. "We think they went about it the wrong way, so sweeping, so secretively, so abusively and harassingly."

Pruitt said the AP would have sought to narrow the scope of the record seizure through courts had it been notified, instead of "the Justice Department acting on its own, being the judge, jury and executioner, in secret."

Reuters was one of nearly 50 news organizations that signed a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder complaining about the AP phone record seizures.

(Reporting by Alina Selyukh; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-chief-says-phone-probe-makes-news-sources-173716388.html

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Farrah Abraham Sex Tape Bikini: Yanked From eBay Due to Hygiene Concerns!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/farrah-abraham-sex-tape-bikini-yanked-from-ebay-due-to-hygiene-c/

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Tanning Mom Music Video: It's Tan Mom (and the Best/Worst Video Ever)!

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Obama Pivots to Jobs Tour at End of Scandal Filled Week

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After a week filled with political scandals, President Obama turned to promoting his jobs tour in his weekly address Saturday.

"That's why I like getting out of the Washington echo chamber whenever I can - because too often, our politics aren't focused on the same things you are. Working hard. Supporting your family and your community. Making sure your kids have every chance in life," Obama said in his weekly address Saturday.

"I'm going to keep trying to work with both parties in Washington to make progress on your priorities. Because I know that if we come together around creating more jobs, educating more of our kids, and building new ladders of opportunity for everyone who's willing to climb them - we'll all prosper, together," he said.

The president traveled to Baltimore, Md. Friday on his second stop for the "Middle Class Jobs and Opportunity Tour." He spoke at a dredging company, visited with children at an elementary school, and stopped at a community center focused on helping fathers and families.

Obama's trip came as he tried to pivot attention back to his second term agenda as a series of political scandals involving the IRS, Benghazi, and the Department of Justice dominated much of the week.

But while the president attempted to divert attention from the political scandals of the week, Republicans used the incidents as a rallying call to repeal the healthcare law.

RELATED: IRS Planted Question About Tax Exempt Groups

"Now: just think about the fact that it's the IRS that will be responsible for enforcing many of these regulations. If we've learned anything this week, it's that the IRS needs less power, not more'" Rep. Andy Harris, R-MD, said in the GOP weekly address, "As a matter of fact, it turns out that the IRS official who oversaw the operation that's under scrutiny for targeting conservatives is now in charge of the IRS's ObamaCare office. You can't make this stuff up."

"Well here's the problem: the train wreck is already here. ObamaCare is knocking Americans off the ladder of opportunity, and the sooner we repeal it, the sooner we can start fixing health care for working families," he said.

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-pivots-jobs-tour-end-scandal-filled-week-122158573--abc-news-politics.html

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Sunday, May 19, 2013

CSN: Phils rally past Reds? |? 'Shut up and play'

BOX SCORE

The Phillies blew a lead in the top of the eighth inning, but roared back with two runs in the bottom of the inning to beat the Cincinnati Reds, 5-3, in front of 43,129 at Citizens Bank Park on Friday night.

Cliff Lee pitched well and had a big hit for the Phillies, who are 20-22.

The victory snapped Cincinnati?s six-game winning streak.

Starting pitching report
Lee was strong once again. He held the second-highest scoring team in the NL to two runs over seven innings. He walked two and struck out seven. Lee has allowed just four runs in 22 innings over his last three starts.

Cincinnati rookie Tony Cingrani allowed five hits and three runs in five innings of work. He left the game trailing, 3-2.

Bullpen report
With Mike Adams sidelined with a back strain, Antonio Bastardo got the call to protect a one-run lead in the eighth. He failed, giving up a solo home run to Joey Votto on the second pitch he threw.

Justin De Fratus finished the eighth and got the win. De Fratus has faced just four batters since joining the club and has two wins.

Jonathan Papelbon took over after the Phillies re-took the lead and earned the save.

Cincinnati lefty Sean Marshall allowed a one-out walk and a hit in the eighth. The hit was a check-swing infield single toward third base by Ryan Howard. Michael Young, who had walked earlier in the frame, scooted home with the go-ahead run on a fielder?s choice against Jonathan Broxton.

At the plate
Jimmy Rollins? two-run home run off Cingrani in the third inning was his first against a lefty since June 24, 2012. It was the Phillies? first homer with a man on base since April 27. They had hit 16 straight solo homers.

With the home run, Rollins reached 1,200 runs for his career.

Lee doubled leading off the bottom of the fifth, moved up on a sacrifice bunt by Rollins and scored the Phillies? third run on Young?s two-out triple.

Domonic Brown drove home the go-ahead run on a fielder?s choice in the eighth. Carlos Ruiz pushed home Howard with an insurance run on a sacrifice fly off of Broxton. Howard dove into home plate just ahead of centerfielder Shin-Soo Choo?s throw.

Jay Bruce and Votto homered for Cincinnati. Bruce's two-run shot came against Lee on a hanging curveball.

Phillies pitchers have allowed 49 homers, second-most in the NL.

Transaction
The Phils swapped out a pair of relievers, sending lefty Raul Valdes to Triple A and recalling right-hander B.J. Rosenberg (see story).

Health check
An MRI revealed a mild strain in the middle of reliever Mike Adams? back (see story). He is day to day. If he can?t be ready to pitch by Tuesday, Adams might have to go on the disabled list as the Phils must add a starting pitcher that day.

Up next
Kyle Kendrick (4-1, 2.47) and Bronson Arroyo (3-4, 3.76) are the pitchers Saturday at 4:05 p.m.

Source: http://www.csnphilly.com/baseball-philadelphia-phillies/instant-replay-phillies-5-reds-3

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U.S. 'Idol' winner shines light on South's Gullah culture

By Harriet McLeod

CHARLESTON, South Carolina (Reuters) - "American Idol" winner Candice Glover, whose powerful voice clinched the title of the popular TV singing show, comes from a sea island culture made up of descendants of West African slaves.

"I speak another language," she said during the Fox TV show. "It's called Geechee."

Some 14.2 million TV viewers tuned in to watch Glover beat Kree Harrison to win the season 12 "American Idol" crown on Thursday.

Glover, 23, is a native of rural St. Helena Island in the coastal South Carolina Lowcountry. The island is part of a new national heritage corridor to preserve and promote the unique African culture and language called Gullah Geechee that survived on the isolated sea islands of South Carolina and Georgia for centuries.

"When she said that, I stood up in my living room and applauded," said Ron Daise, commission chairman of the corridor that also includes parts of North Carolina and Florida. "There's a rootedness about her spirit."

The Gullah Geechee language is a mix of West African dialects and English. The Glover family does not speak the language as well as older generations, Glover's mother, Carole, said in an interview this week.

But she added that her daughter's revelation made residents of St. Helena "proud and happy."

In April, Daise wrote Glover a congratulatory letter that ended in Gullah: "We stan op an clap clap clap clap cuz oona da one a we! A kno de Lawd done lay E han pon oona."

The oldest of seven children, Glover was 4 years old and singing solos in church when her parents first noticed her talent. When she was 8, she earned a standing ovation.

"She always got solos because, you know, she has the voice to take us there, into worship," her mother said. "It came from God, that's what I believe."

With no formal training, Candice entered talent shows, made YouTube videos in her living room and auditioned for "American Idol" twice and was cut. She was working at a beach resort when she made it onto the show with her third try.

Supporters on St. Helena Island sold T-shirts and pins to send Glover's parents to California to watch her perform. Her mother is a former daycare worker, and her father, John, is a truck driver. Bars in the nearby city of Beaufort created and served Candy Cane Martinis for "Idol" parties.

Governor Nikki Haley proclaimed May 4, Glover's homecoming day from the show, "Candice Glover Day" statewide. A riverfront parade down streets featured a marching band and floats.

"She cried so much during that day, all through the parade she cried," her mother said. "Because this is a little country girl and this is her dream."

Glover's mother said she thought a high point of the "American Idol" season was her daughter's performance of "You've Changed," the jazz song made famous by Billie Holiday.

"My parents have always taught me to be humble in everything that you do and everybody has to start at the bottom," Glover told a South Carolina television station.

Asked what goes through her mind before a performance, she said, "the lyrics."

She starts a 40-city national tour, with 10 other "Idol" finalists, on June 29.

(Editing by Patricia Reaney, Jackie Frank and Matthew Lewis)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-idol-winner-shines-spotlight-souths-gullah-geechee-162751440.html

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Cannes 2013 Review: 'Fruitvale Station' - Film School Rejects

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The debut feature from Ryan Coogler has been the year?s Cinderella story ever since it bowed at Sundance and scooped the Grand Jury Prize, as well as the Audience Award, for U.S. dramatic film. Received in similarly rapturous terms by critics at this week?s Cannes screening, it would not be surprising to many if Fruitvale Station had the chutzpah to carry itself, or at least some of its esteemed performers, all the way to Hollywood?s awards season.

It opens with seemingly authentic camera phone footage ? perhaps the very same footage that, as we learn at the film?s end titles, incriminated those involved ? of 22-year-old Oscar Grant being accosted by two police officers. We know, even if we remain unaware of the resolution, that things are not going to end well.

While in many ways Coogler?s film feels very much like the same redemptive gangster drama we?ve seen so many times, the difference here, ostensibly, is that it?s real. Oscar (Michael B. Jordan) wants to stop slinging dope and get a proper job so that he can support his girlfriend and his daughter, but of course he faces professional hurdles that then impinge on his personal life. In fact, it is really only a familiar drama in as much as it features a character trying to extricate himself from less-than-desirable circumstances. It is Coogler?s riveting approach and the spellbinding performances that make it feel so fresh.

In many scenes it?s the relaxed chemistry between the performers, many of them unknown or non-professional, that takes them all the way ? notably a charming exchange between Oscar and a local white girl shopping for raw fish at the local supermarket Oscar used to work at. It is here that we observe the erratic and explosive nature of Oscar, as he ends up grovelling to get his old job back and is ostensibly rebuffed, much to his frustration. Like Oscar himself, the tone of this film can shift in an insant, yet avoids feeling particularly jarring because Oscar?s life is, in one way or another, almost always in peril.

However, despite his misgivings, including a previous stint in the clink depicted through flashback, Oscar is a kind soul, demonstrated by a brief scene in which he tends to a dog injured by a hit-and-run driver. As such, the film is more about defining Oscar?s thoughts in his final day than what happened to him in his final moments. On a personal level he is a liar and a cheat, but he is trying to better himself, and on a basic humanist level it?s difficult not to identify with that.

Coogler thankfully doesn?t ladle out the minor details up close. A communal dinner scene says plenty without needing to speak, and the chemistry between Oscar and his daughter as they simply brush their teeth only rachets up our interest, well aware that father and daughter are soon to be separated.

There are a few foibles, though, specifically the feeling that Oscar?s constant preoccupation with the possibilities of tomorrow might be a tad manufactured or at least exaggerated for dramatic effect. One late-day conversation between Oscar and his daughter, in which he promises her he will come back home, seems particularly telegraphed for emotional purposes. This attempt to signpost the ending appears to be a vague effort to imbue the already heart-wrenching story with needless cosmic significance. Without question, the story of Grant?s wrongful death stands strong on its own terms.

The third act, however, does generate palpable tension as audiences begin to wonder when the fatal bullet will discharge. Kevin Durand and Chad Michael Murray are functionally effective in two glorified cameos as the officers involved in the shooting, and though it might be easy to question the veracity of these events, given how weighted they seem against the BART Police Department, their documentation can, as the credits state, be found in video-based fact.

Incredulously remaining trip-wire tense despite a known outcome, Fruitvale Station is an exceptional dramatic feature propelled by superb performances across the board, specifically Jordan (best known to audiences for his work on Chronicle) and Octavia Spencer,?who, playing Oscar?s mother, surmises the emotional turmoil of this torrid situation. If the film can survive on the same level of goodwill as Beasts of the Southern Wild (another Sundance darling), expect Best Original Screenplay and Best Supporting Actress Oscar nominations, as well as a good deal of love at the Independent Spirit Awards.

The Upside: Coogler?s debut is a dramatically rich, superbly drawn drama which balances notions of family with the regrettable end to its tale. Performances across the board are uniformly excellent.

The Downside: The narrative occasionally feels affected for dramatic potency in places, and ironically feels less effective and convincing as a result.

On the Side:?When it debuted at Sundance, Fruitvale Station?had the shorter title of?Fruitvale.

B+

Source: http://www.filmschoolrejects.com/reviews/cannes-2013-review-fruitvale-station.php?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=cannes-2013-review-fruitvale-station

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Saturday, May 18, 2013

Marketo jumps in 1st day trading on Nasdaq

NEW YORK (AP) -- Shares of Marketo, a provider of cloud-based marketing software, leaped in their trading debut on Friday.

The stock rose $7.70, or 59.2 percent, to $20.70 in afternoon trading. The shares were priced at $13, at the high end of the expected range of $11 to $13 per share. The broader markets rose just under 1 percent.

Marketo raised about $79.3 million in the offering.

The initial public offering of approximately 6.1 million shares included about 5.8 million shares being offered by Marketo Inc. and 309,509 shares from selling stockholders. The San Mateo, Calif. company won't receive any proceeds from stock sold by selling shareholders.

Marketo said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that it planned to use net proceeds from the offering and a concurrent private placement for working capital and other general corporate purposes. The company said that it may also use part of the proceeds to buy or invest in complementary businesses, products, services, technologies or other assets.

The shares are listed on the Nasdaq under the "MKTO" ticker symbol.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/marketo-jumps-1st-day-trading-174428591.html

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Report: Obama dreams of ?going Bulworth?

President Barack Obama?exasperated by scandals, a seemingly stalled domestic agenda and armchair chiefs of staff in the media?wants to tell you what he really thinks, Washington. Really let you have it. In fact, he?s so frustrated with all of the inside-the-Beltway BS that he might hire an assassin to target him in a couple of days, but not before he?s really ripped politicians (especially Democrats), denounced the outsized weight of money in elections and used ?socialism? as a rallying cry against health insurance companies.

Wait, what?

The New York Times reported on Thursday that Obama "has talked longingly of ?going Bulworth,? a reference to a little-remembered 1998 Warren Beatty movie about a senator who risked it all to say what he really thought."

?Probably every president says that from time to time,? the Times quoted longtime Obama adviser David Axelrod as saying. ''It's probably cathartic just to say it. But the reality is that while you want to be truthful, you want to be straightforward, you also want to be practical about whatever you're saying.''

The Times' description of the movie is a bit antiseptic. Bulworth, a disillusioned veteran Democratic senator from California facing a tough primary, takes out a rich life insurance policy on himself, with his daughter as beneficiary, and hires an assassin to kill him in a few days' time. Thinking he's going to die, Bulworth decides he has nothing to lose and hits the campaign trail skewering the state of politics?and notably the Democratic Party and race relations.

It?s easy to imagine Obama profoundly unhappy with the state of politics in the infancy of his second term. Most Americans, after all, loathe Congress, worry about the fitful economic recovery and are deeply skeptical that politicians or the media share their concerns.

And White House aides haven?t been shy about bluntly dismissing pundits second-guessing Obama?s strategy for advancing his agenda. (It bears noting, though, that even as those aides roll their eyes at the ?Green Lantern Theory of Politics??the idea that the president just needs to change things by force of will?or at the idea that he needs to cut more deals, or at calls for him to schmooze more with lawmakers, Obama has been putting all of that advice into practice.) Obama himself has shown flashes of angry candor in recent months, charging in April that the National Rifle Association "willfully lied" about bipartisan legislation to tighten background checks on would-be gun buyers, and dismissing Republican charges of a cover-up in the Benghazi controversy as a "sideshow" and a "political circus" that dishonors the memory of the four Americans killed there.

The president also played his frustration for laughs at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, though not without a sharp underlying message.

"Everybody has got plenty of advice. Maureen Dowd said I could solve all my problems if I were just more like Michael Douglas in 'The American President.' And I know Michael is here tonight. Michael, what?s your secret, man? Could it be that you were an actor in an Aaron Sorkin liberal fantasy? Might that have something to do with it?" he joked.

"The American President" (1995) and "Bulworth" both reflected growing liberal frustration and disenchantment with then-President Bill Clinton. Ironically, Sorkin reportedly helped punch up the Bulworth script but was never credited.

Maybe Dowd just had the wrong Hollywood fantasy?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/obama-dreams-going-bulworth-york-times-reports-142502152.html

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Friday, May 17, 2013

Shares fall as Fed officials talk of QE exit

By David Brett

LONDON (Reuters) - The dollar held firm near a 10-month high versus a basket of currencies on Friday and European shares fell after a regional Federal Reserve chief said the U.S. central bank may begin to taper its asset buying this summer.

European shares <.fteu3> were down 0.2 percent at 1,242.49, edging further back from five-year highs and following a retreat in Asian stocks and Thursday's late fall on Wall Street, but still on track for a weekly gain.

"The stock market is driven by liquidity and sooner or later this must end," KBC senior economist Koen De Leus said.

"In the near-term a correction would be healthy, but on the whole the market is (still) well supported by the huge amount of liquidity that is pumped into the system by the central banks."

In Asia, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan <.miapj0000pus> fell 0.4 percent to 479.33.

The German Bund future slipped at the open as some investors booked profits after this week's gains, but expectations central bank policies will remain ultra-easy for months limited losses.

The Bund future FGBLc1 was 4 ticks lower at 145.27 compared with 145.31 at Thursday's settlement, while the dollar rose 0.4 percent to 83.944 <.dxy> versus its currency basket, close to this week's 10-month high of 84.094.

The Fed's quantitative easing program has helped stabilize the world's largest economy and sent investors scrambling for returns, suppressing bond and cash yields, inflating asset prices and fuelling a global rally in stocks.

San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank President John Williams said on Thursday the Fed could begin easing its monetary stimulus this summer and end bond buying late this year.

Although Williams does not have a vote in the Fed's policy-setting panel this year, his comments weighed on U.S. shares, which have soared to record highs this year, in part because of the Fed's purchases of $85 billion a month in bonds.

A trio of hawkish regional Federal Reserve officials meanwhile called for the U.S. central bank to stop buying mortgage-backed bonds, citing a recent improvement in the housing market.

"The Fed realizes the impact that (QE) has on markets and the potential negative impact on risky assets. Therefore they try to prepare the markets a bit for an eventual end," said BNP Paribas Fortis Global Markets head of research Philippe Gijsels.

(Additional reporting by Atul Prakash; Editing by Catherine Evans)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dollar-firmer-fed-remarks-asian-shares-mixed-043219740.html

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UK's worst property loans rise to near quarter of total - study

By Tom Bill

LONDON (Reuters) - Almost a quarter of commercial property loans in Britain are higher in value than the underlying real estate, a study showed on Friday, highlighting the toxic legacy of reckless lending before the financial crash.

The figure grew to 23 percent at the end of 2012 from 20 percent a year earlier, according to De Montfort University, or about 45 billion pounds of a total of some 195 billion.

The increase means the worst-quality loans are deteriorating as property prices drop in many parts of the country, exacerbating the problem for banks as they attempt to purge their books of property debt amassed during years of profligate lending in the run-up to the crash.

The rise was due to the severity of Britain's economic slump outside London and means banks hold a growing number of poor-quality loans that will hinder attempts to clean up their balance sheets.

The so-called loan-to-value ratio typically rises above 100 percent when the value of a property falls, potentially triggering a breach in the loan deal, which banks can waive if they believe property markets will recover.

While property values have recovered since the crash in London, driven by global investors seeking a safe place to park cash, other areas of the country have experienced falls of 40 or 50 percent, with prices still falling in many areas as the British government struggles to kickstart economic growth.

"Banks have good, bad and ugly loans but the ugly is getting uglier," said Philip Cropper, an executive director and debt specialist at property consultant CBRE. "It means a more protracted clean-up for the banks."

The issue also means lenders will increasingly curb credit for all but the safest deals and the most blue-chip of developers, widening the gulf further between London and the rest of the country, said Peter Cosmetatos, director of policy at the British Property Federation.

Banks including Lloyds and RBS have sold portfolios of real-estate debt at steep discounts to investors like Blackstone and Lone Star in recent years as the clean-up process began and the report shows steady progress.

Outstanding property debt for all types of lenders shrank by 7.7 percent last year from 214.4 billion pounds to 197.9 billion.

The De Montfort study was based on data from 78 of the biggest lenders in the UK.

(Editing by David Holmes)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/worst-property-loans-rise-near-quarter-total-study-230406011.html

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'Good vibrations:' Brain ultrasound improves mood

May 15, 2013 ? Non-invasive brain stimulation techniques aimed at mental and neurological conditions include transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) for depression, and transcranial direct current (electrical) stimulation (tDCS), shown to improve memory. Transcranial ultrasound stimulation (TUS) has also shown promise.

Ultrasound consists of mechanical vibrations, like sound, but with frequencies far greater than the upper limit of human hearing, around 20 thousand to 20 million cycles per second (20 kilohertz to 20 megahertz). Ultrasound vibrations penetrate bodily tissue including bone, and are widely used to image anatomical structures via echo effects, e.g. visualizing unborn babies in mothers' wombs, and organs, blood vessels, nerves and other structures in medical procedures. Virtually every part of the body, including the brain, has been safely imaged with low to moderate intensity ultrasound.

High intensity, focused ultrasound can damage tissue by heating and cavitation, and has been used to ablate tumors and other lesions. 'Sub-thermal' ultrasound can safely stimulate neural tissue. In 2002 a UCLA group led by Alexander Bystritsky noticed beneficial side effects in psychiatric patients whose brains were imaged by TUS. A team led by Virginia Tech's W. Jamie Tyler has shown TUS-induced behavioral and electrophysiological changes in animals. A Harvard group led by S-S Yoo has used focused ultrasound aimed at mouse motor cortex to wag the mouse's tail. But clinical trials of TUS aimed at human mental states have been lacking.

Now, in an article in the journal Brain Stimulation, a group from the Departments of Anesthesiology and Radiology at the University of Arizona Medical Center in Tucson, Arizona has investigated TUS for modulating mental states in a pilot study in human volunteers suffering from chronic pain. A clinical ultrasound imaging device (General Electric LOGIQe) was used, with the ultrasound probe applied at the scalp overlying the brain's temporal and frontal cortex (visible on the imaging screen). In random order, each subject received two 15 second exposures: sham/placebo, and 8 megahertz ultrasound (undetectable to subjects). Following exposure, subjects reported (by visual analog scales) significant improvement in mood both 10 minutes and 40 minutes after TUS, but not after sham/placebo. In a followup study (led by University of Arizona psychologists Jay Sanguineti and John JB Allen) preliminary results suggest 2 megahertz TUS (which traverses skull more readily) may be more effective in mood enhancement than 8 megahertz TUS.

The mechanism by which TUS can affect mental states is unknown (as is the mechanism by which the brain produces mental states). Tyler proposed TUS acts by vibrational stretching of neuronal membranes and/or extracellular matrix, but two recent papers from the group of Anirban Bandyopadhyay at National Institute of Material Sciences (NIMS) in Tsukuba, Japan (Sahu et al. [2013] Appl. Phys. Letts. 102, 123701; Sahu et al [2013] Biosensors and Bioelectronics 47:141) have suggested another possibility. The NIMS group used nanotechnology to study conductive properties of individual microtubules, protein polymers of tubulin (the brain's most prevalent protein). Major components of the neuronal cytoskeleton, microtubules grow and extend neurons, form and regulate synapses, are disrupted in Alzheimer's disease, and theoretically linked to information processing, memory encoding and mental states. Bandyopadhyay's NIMS group found that microtubules have remarkable electronic conductive properties when excited at certain specific resonant frequencies, e.g. in the low megahertz, precisely the range of TUS.

Dr. Stuart Hameroff, lead author on the new TUS study, said: "This suggests TUS may stimulate natural megahertz resonances in brain microtubules, enhancing not only mood and conscious mental states, but perhaps also microtubule functions in synaptic plasticity, nerve growth and repair. We plan further studies of TUS on traumatic brain injury, Alzheimer's disease and post-traumatic stress disorders. 'Tuning the tubules' may help a variety of mental states and cognitive disorders."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/UYv25BgQEuE/130515094825.htm

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Thursday, May 16, 2013

Cyclone Mahasen fizzles as it hits Bangladesh

COX'S BAZAR, Bangladesh (AP) ? Cyclone Mahasan weakened Thursday afternoon into a tropical storm and then dissipated, causing far less damage than had been feared as it passed over Bangladesh and spared Myanmar almost entirely, meteorological officials said.

At least 45 deaths related to Mahasen were reported in Bangladesh, Myanmar and Sri Lanka, but officials had prepared for a far greater storm. Bangladesh evacuated 1 million people from coastal areas and the United Nations warned that 8.2 million people could face life-threatening conditions.

The cyclone lost power as it shed huge amounts of rainfall and then veered west of its predicted path, sparing major Bangladeshi population areas, including Chittagong and the seaside resort of Cox's Bazar, said Mohammad Shah Alam, director of the Bangladesh Meteorological Department.

Coastal regions were also spared major damage because the storm hit during low tide, which meant there was no major tidal surge, he said.

"Thank God we have been spared this time," local government administrator Ruhul Amin said.

The storm's impact in Myanmar's Rakhine state, where officials were having trouble evacuating tens of thousands of displaced Rohingya people, was minimal.

"It's all over, and we are very relieved that we didn't have any unfortunate incident in Rakhine state due to the cyclone," Win Myaing, Rakhine's regional spokesman said.

In Cox's Bazar, tens of thousands of people had fled shanty homes along the coast and packed into cyclone shelters, hotels, schools and government office buildings. But by Thursday afternoon, the sun was shining and Amin said he planned to close the shelters by the evening.

The storm's slow movement toward Bangladesh gave the government plenty of warning to get people to safety, Amin said.

"But for the evacuation, the casualties would have been higher," he said.

In addition, river ferries and boat services were suspended, and scores of factories near the choppy Bay of Bengal were closed. The military said it kept 22 navy ships and 19 Air Force helicopters at the ready. By Thursday night, ferry service had resumed.

A 1991 cyclone that slammed into Bangladesh from the Bay of Bengal killed an estimated 139,000 people and left millions homeless. In 2008, Myanmar's southern delta was devastated by Cyclone Nargis, which swept away entire farming villages and killed more than 130,000 people. Both those cyclones were much more powerful than Mahasen, which hit land with maximum wind speeds of about 100 kph (62 mph) and quickly weakened, said Alam, the meteorological official.

By the time it hit Chittagong and Cox's Bazar, wind speeds had plunged to 25 kph (16 mph), Alam said. The storm then dissipated entirely, he said.

Bangladesh's government said at least 10 people were killed by the storm across the nation's vast coastal region, most either from the collapse of mud walls or hit by fallen trees.

Related heavy rains and flooding in Sri Lanka were blamed for eight deaths earlier this week.

At least eight people ? and possibly many more ? were killed in Myanmar as they fled the cyclone Monday night, when overcrowded boats carrying more than 100 Rohingya capsized. Only 43 people had been rescued by Thursday, and more than 50 were still missing.

Babul Akther, a Bangladeshi police official in Tekhnaf close to Myanmar border, said police there found 19 bodies Thursday in the Naaf River, which separates the two nations. He said most of the decomposing bodies were of children, and they suspect they are victims of the boats filled with Rohingya that capsized Monday.

Much attention was focused on western Myanmar because of the crowded, low-lying camps where many Rohingya refused to evacuate.

U.N. officials, hoping they would inspire greater trust, had fanned out across the area to encourage people to leave.

In Rakhine state, around 140,000 people ? mostly Rohingya ? have been living in the camps since last year, when two outbreaks of sectarian violence between the Muslim minority and ethnic Rakhine Buddhists forced many Rohingya from their homes.

Nearly half the displaced live in coastal areas that were considered highly vulnerable to storm surges and flooding from Cyclone Mahasen.

"Pack and leave," a Rakhine state official, U Hla Maung, warned before the storm hit as he walked through a camp near Sittwe, the state capital. Accompanied by more than a dozen soldiers and riot police, he suggested that people living there move to a nearby railroad embankment, then left without offering help.

Some Rohingya took down their tents and hauled their belongings away in cycle-rickshaws, or carried them in bags balanced on their heads.

Ko Hla Maung, an unemployed fisherman, was among those who had not left as of Thursday morning.

"We have no safe place to move, so we're staying here, whether the storm comes or not," he said. "... The soldiers want to take us to a village closer to the sea, and we're not going to do that. ... If the storm is coming, then that village will be destroyed."

___

Associated Press writers Tim Sullivan in Sittwe, Myanmar, Yadana Htun and Aye Aye Win in Yangon, Myanmar, Jocelyn Gecker in Bangkok and Julhas Alam in Dhaka, Bangladesh contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cyclone-mahasen-fizzles-hits-bangladesh-102717888.html

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Washington DC considers $250k insurance for gun owners ? RT USA

Washington, D.C. already has some of the strictest gun-control laws in the country, but the city council is considering a bill that would require prospective gun owners to purchase a $250,000 liability insurance policy.

The proposed bill, B20-170, would mandate insurance coverage for negligent and intentional acts in which a gun is used in cases other than self-defense. Even those who already own gun licenses would be required to purchase the liability insurance within 30 days of the effective date of the bill.

The bill states that its purpose is to compensate victims of gun violence through the money raised from the licensing mandate, but critics have scrutinized the measure for possibly inflicting heavy costs upon gun owners.

It is not yet clear how much a $250,000 liability insurance policy would cost, but if it is significant, it could serve as a barrier against purchasing firearms. Democratic Councilmember Mary Cheh, who introduced the bill, told WTTF-TV that she is willing to negotiate with critics about the cost.

?I don?t mean it to be a centrifuge as a ban,? she said. ?I want it to really be insurance.?

She also added that guns ?are instrumentalities that, if mishandled or allow others access or mishandling, can cause great harm,? thereby emphasizing the need for insurance to compensate victims.

But there is also a gap in the proposed bill: if crimes are committed using an illegal weapon, victims would not receive any sort of compensation, since those who buy guns illegally would not have mandated insurance.

The council committee heard testimonies on the need for such insurance on Thursday, but D.C. Mayor Vincent Gray?s administration does not currently support the bill. In a written testimony to the DC Council, the deputy insurance commissioner wrote that the mayor ?is not convinced that there is currently a persuasive argument to support the need for insurance for firearms in the home.?

Three gun owners and two insurance-industry representatives testified against the bill during the10 a.m.hearing, while the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence testified in favor of the proposal, the Associated Press reports.

A number of other states are considering similar measures to the bill proposed by Cheh, but no such law has yet been passed in the US.

Meanwhile, the state of Maryland has this week entered the ranks of states with the most restrictive gun laws. Gov. Martin O?Malley on Thursday signed a bill that will ban 45 assault rifles and restrict ammunition magazines to 10 rounds. The legislation also requires Americans who buy handguns to be fingerprinted.

Source: http://rt.com/usa/washington-dc-gun-insurance-389/

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Justice investigating IRS targeting of tea party

Attorney General Eric Holder pauses during a news conference at the Justice Department in Washington, Tuesday, May 14, 2013. Holder said he's ordered a Justice Department investigation into the Internal Revenue Service's targeting of conservative groups for extra tax scrutiny. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Attorney General Eric Holder pauses during a news conference at the Justice Department in Washington, Tuesday, May 14, 2013. Holder said he's ordered a Justice Department investigation into the Internal Revenue Service's targeting of conservative groups for extra tax scrutiny. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Gov. Scott Walker says the IRS's targeting of conservative groups for extra scrutiny is a real threat to our freedoms, on Tuesday, May 14, 2013, in Madison, Wis. (AP Photo/Scott Bauer)

The John Weld Peck Federal Building, shown Tuesday, May 14, 2013, in Cincinnati, houses the main offices for the Internal Revenue Service in the city. The IRS apologized Friday for what it acknowledged was "inappropriate" targeting of conservative political groups during the 2012 election to see whether they were violating their tax-exempt status. In some cases, the IRS acknowledged, agents inappropriately asked for lists of donors. The agency blamed low-level employees in a Cincinnati office, saying no high-level officials were aware.(AP Photo/Al Behrman)

(AP) ? The Justice Department is opening a criminal investigation of the Internal Revenue Service just as another probe concludes that lax management enabled agents to improperly target tea party groups for extra scrutiny when they applied for tax exempt status.

Attorney General Eric Holder said he ordered the FBI to investigate Friday ? the day the IRS publicly acknowledged that it had singled out conservative groups.

"Those (actions) were, I think, as everyone can agree, if not criminal, they were certainly outrageous and unacceptable," Holder said. "But we are examining the facts to see if there were criminal violations."

Holder is scheduled to testify Wednesday before the House Judiciary Committee.

Three congressional committees already are investigating the IRS for singling out tea party and other conservative groups during the 2010 congressional elections and the 2012 presidential election. But Holder's announcement would take the matter to another level if investigators are able to prove that laws were broken.

Ineffective management at the IRS allowed agents to improperly target tea party groups for more than 18 months, said a report released Tuesday by the Treasury inspector general for tax administration. The report lays much of the blame on IRS supervisors in Washington who oversaw a group of specialists in Cincinnati who screened applications for tax exempt status.

It does not indicate that Washington initiated the targeting of conservative groups. But it does say a top supervisor in Washington did not adequately supervise agents in the field even after she learned the agents were acting improperly.

"The report's findings are intolerable and inexcusable," President Barack Obama said in a statement. "The federal government must conduct itself in a way that's worthy of the public's trust, and that's especially true for the IRS. The IRS must apply the law in a fair and impartial way, and its employees must act with utmost integrity. This report shows that some of its employees failed that test."

The agency started targeting groups with "Tea Party," ''Patriots" or "9/12 Project" in their applications for tax exempt status in March 2010, the inspector general's report said. By August 2010, it was part of the written criteria used to flag groups for additional scrutiny.

Lois Lerner, who heads the IRS division that oversees tax exempt organizations, had been briefed on the matter in June 2011. She ordered the initial tea party criteria to be scrapped, but it later evolved to include groups that promoted the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. The practice was ended in May 2012, the report said.

IRS agents were trying to determine whether the political activities of such groups disqualified them for tax exempt status. These groups were claiming tax exempt status as organizations promoting social welfare. Unlike other charitable groups, they can engage in political activity. But politics cannot be their primary mission.

It is up to the IRS to make the determination.

But by using improper criteria, the IRS targeted some groups, even though there were no indications that they engaged in significant political activities, the report said. Other non-tea party groups that had significant political activities were not screened, the report said.

"The criteria developed by the Determinations Unit gives the appearance that the IRS is not impartial in conducting its mission," the report said.

The additional screening resulted in long delays as IRS agents asked intrusive, sometimes inappropriate questions, or merely let applications languish, the report said. Inappropriate questions included requests for lists of donors and the political affiliation of officers.

"Unfortunately, the report raises more questions than it answers," said House Oversight Committee Chairman Darrell Issa, R-Calif. "What we do know for sure is that the IRS personnel responsible for granting tax exemptions systematically targeted conservative groups for extra scrutiny, and that officials in Washington, D.C., were aware of this practice, even while publicly claiming that it never happened."

The IRS on Friday apologized for singling out tea party and other conservative groups.

On Tuesday, the agency said, "After seeing issues with particular cases, inappropriate shortcuts were used to determine which cases may be engaging in political activities. It is important to note that the vast majority of these cases would still have been centralized based on the general criteria used for other cases."

Acting IRS Commissioner Steven Miller is scheduled to testify before the House Ways and Means Committee at a hearing Friday. Miller became acting commissioner in November, after Commissioner Douglas Shulman completed his five-year term. Shulman had been appointed by President George W. Bush.

___

Follow Stephen Ohlemacher on Twitter: http://twitter.com/stephenatap

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-05-15-US-IRS-Political-Groups/id-f11005cae9f443749859f43b3cb5bd03

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Prison Planet.com ? DRUDGE: Assume all communications being ...

Prison Planet.com
May 14, 2013

Related posts:

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  4. Media Matters writer ?sorry? after blasting Drudge for Martin photo
  5. Senate Warns Employees To Avoid Drudge Report

This article was posted: Tuesday, May 14, 2013 at 5:18 am





34 Responses to ?DRUDGE: Assume all communications being monitored?

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Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Global life spans continue to lengthen, WHO says

By Tom Miles

GENEVA (Reuters) - People are living longer than ever and "dramatic" gains in life expectancy show no sign of slowing down, the World Health Organization said on Wednesday.

"The global life expectancy has increased from 64 years in 1990 to 70 years in 2011. That's dramatic," Colin Mathers, coordinator for mortality and burden of disease at the WHO, said as the organization launched its annual world health statistics report.

"That's an average increase in life expectancy of 8 hours a day over the last 20 years."

Global life expectancy at birth was 72 years for women and 68 years for men in 2011. A 60-year-old man could expect to live another 19 years and a woman of the same age could count on another 21 years, two years more than in 1990.

Much of the global increase is due to a rapid fall in child mortality over the past decade, as well as improvements in China and India, which have both seen a seven-year jump in average life expectancy at birth since 1990.

Life expectancy has fallen in North Korea, South Africa, Lesotho, Zimbabwe and Libya since 1990, a year that serves as the baseline for the United Nations Millennium Development Goals.

But everywhere else saw an improvement, or at least no change, in life expectancy at birth.

Even countries where people live longest have managed to keep eking out a few more years, suggesting that humans have not yet reached a natural limit to their age. That has surprised some experts.

"In 1990 a 60 year-old (in a high income country) had a life expectancy of 21 years, and in 2011 it was 24 years. I think there were very few people who predicted that in 1990," said Ties Boerma, director of health statistics and informatics.

"So there's no real evidence that the increase is not continuing."

Mathers said previous research had shown life expectancy grew by 2-2.5 years per decade in high-income countries during the 20th century, and the question of whether the gains might slow down was the subject of "a huge debate among the demographers".

The latest figures show countries at the top end of the life expectancy scale, such as Japan, Australia and Switzerland, continue to make improvements.

"Presumably there will be some slowing down eventually unless gene therapy and all sorts of new scientific breakthroughs change that. Global warming and conflict and other things could change it also," Mathers said.

"Some people argue that increasing rates of obesity will start to impact on life expectancy but so far we haven't seen that. The improvements in other risk factors have more than outweighed any adverse effect of increasing levels of obesity in high income countries."

(Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/global-life-spans-continue-lengthen-says-202446387.html

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