Archive for May, 2008

Judge: Woman’s rape case against Halliburton can go to trial

From RawStory:

 A woman who said she was raped by co-workers while employed by a contractor in Iraq can take her claims to trial, a federal judge ruled Friday.

 

 Jamie Leigh Jones filed a federal lawsuit last year, saying she was attacked while working for a Halliburton Co. subsidiary at Camp Hope, Baghdad, in 2005. Her lawsuit claims that after she endured harassment from some of the men where she lived in coed barracks, she was drugged and raped by Halliburton and KBR firefighters.

 

Jones, a former Conroe resident, said a KBR representative imprisoned her in a shipping container for a day so she wouldn’t report the assault.

 

Attorneys for Halliburton, KBR and other subsidiaries that have been sued have disputed Jones’ allegations. KBR split from Halliburton last year.

 

Washington-based attorney Stephanie Morris said her client is pleased that she will have the opportunity to bring attention to the case.

 

“We are extremely excited we can now go forward and present the case in the public arena and make the public aware of what been going on overseas in Iraq. Halliburton has ratified gross sexual conduct by their failure to act,” Morris said.

 

Article Continues @ Sourced Site.

Gas Prices Send Surge of Riders to Mass Transit

From The New York Times:

 

DENVER — With the price of gas approaching $4 a gallon, more commuters are abandoning their cars and taking the train or bus instead.

 

Mass transit systems around the country are seeing standing-room-only crowds on bus lines where seats were once easy to come by. Parking lots at many bus and light rail stations are suddenly overflowing, with commuters in some towns risking a ticket or tow by parking on nearby grassy areas and in vacant lots.

 

“In almost every transit system I talk to, we’re seeing very high rates of growth the last few months,” said William W. Millar, president of the American Public Transportation Association.

 

“It’s very clear that a significant portion of the increase in transit use is directly caused by people who are looking for alternatives to paying $3.50 a gallon for gas.”

 

Some cities with long-established public transit systems, like New York and Boston, have seen increases in ridership of 5 percent or more so far this year. But the biggest surges — of 10 to 15 percent or more over last year — are occurring in many metropolitan areas in the South and West where the driving culture is strongest and bus and rail lines are more limited.

 

Here in Denver, for example, ridership was up 8 percent in the first three months of the year compared with last year, despite a fare increase in January and a slowing economy, which usually means fewer commuters. Several routes on the system have reached capacity, particularly at rush hour, for the first time.

 

“We are at a tipping point,” said Clarence W. Marsella, chief executive of the Denver Regional Transportation District, referring to gasoline prices. 

 

 

 Article Continues @ Sourced Site

First-class stamp prices rise 1 penny to 42 cents Monday

By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - The cost of mailing a letter goes up a penny to 42 cents on Monday, the latest in what are expected to be annual price adjustments by the Postal Service.

A new law regulating the post office makes it easier to raise rates as long as the agency doesn’t exceed the rate of inflation. Rates are to be adjusted each May.

But the post office also has introduced a way for people to save money when the price goes up, the Forever stamp, which remains valid for first-class postage regardless of any increases.

With the rate increase approaching, sales of the Forever stamp reached 64 million-a-day in April, postal officials said.

The increase comes just a week after the post office announced it had a loss of $700 million in the second quarter of the fiscal year, blamed largely on declining mail volume and rising fuel prices.

While the charge for the first ounce of a first-class letter rises to 42 cents, the price of each added ounce will remain 17 cents, so a two-ounce letter will go up a penny to 59 cents. More

Rear Admiral’s affair included sex at Bush 41’s White House

WASHINGTON (CNN) — A Navy admiral engaged in sexual relations in the White House in 1990 with a federal employee whom he falsely told he was a widower, according to a report released Friday by the Defense Department.

In March, when the report was submitted to Pentagon officials, Rear Adm. John Stufflebeem was demoted and fired from his post as director of the Navy staff.

Stufflebeem told investigators he couldn’t remember the name of the woman he had an affair with. He also lied when he told investigators he did not engage in sexual relations with the woman, identified as “Jane Doe,” the Defense Department’s inspector general’s report said.

Jane Doe, who was then unmarried and working for a federal agency, told the investigators the allegations were true, the report said. Her supervisor and Stufflebeem’s superiors supported her testimony.

Stufflebeem was convicted April 18 of making false official statements to investigators. After the hearing, called an admiral’s mast, he requested retirement.

Jane Doe told investigators that she and Stufflebeem began their affair on an overseas trip in 1989, that the married admiral told her he was a widower who was raising his children as a single parent and that they had sexual relations several times, including once in a White House room reserved for “military aides with overnight duties.”

She also told investigators that Stufflebeem came to her home on the day in August 1990 when she learned he was married and that she called him “scum,” shut the door in his face and never spoke to him again.

At issue was Stufflebeem’s removal from his post as a presidential aide in 1990. Stufflebeem testified that he initiated the request to leave his White House post because of “close family personal problems.” But his superiors testified that he was removed from the post because of his relationship with the woman — and that he admitted the affair.

Doe also said Stufflebeem told her that his wife had died of breast cancer, that a woman who answered the phone when she called his home was the children’s nanny and that he continued to wear his wedding ring “for his daughters who missed their late mother.”

Stufflebeem became well known in the initial months of the war in Afghanistan, when he often conducted on-camera television briefings as a Pentagon spokesman. He was then deputy director for global operations on the Joint Staff. More

Your Chance To Ask George Bush Anything!

I rarely pay attention to ads that accompany news stories, but one ad in particular, caught my eye this morning. 

Apparently, Yahoo News and Politico.com are teaming up to interview Bush on May 13th, and would like you to submit your questions.

Here is what the ad looked like. When I clicked on it, an email in my default email program opened up. And surprisingly, the subject line was left blank. So, you can do the same thing! Here’s the address: 
gwbquestions@yahoo-inc.com

Know it, click it, use it!

The interview occurs on Tuesday, May 13th, 2008, so there’s still plenty of time to get your questions in! Be sure to leave your comments below, and tell us what your question was. When the transcript of the interview is made available, I’ll post it as a follow-up article on the HORN’s news blog.

Happy e-mailing!

-Sue, and the ranting keyboard

Nat’l Guardsman Charged With Selling Metal From Border Fence

By CARLI BROSSEAU, Tucson Citizen

An Air National Guardsman was arrested Wednesday in Phoenix on suspicion of stealing metal from the border fence and selling it, a U.S. Attorney’s Office spokeswoman said.

Master Sgt. Robert J. Kelley, 48, of the Wyoming Air National Guard was charged in Phoenix with theft of government property, Sandy Raynor said.

He sold at least five loads of metal for more than $8,000, which he later spent on a pistol, a garage door opener, cowboy boots and tools, she said.

If convicted, he could face up to 10 years in federal prison, a $250,000 fine or both, she said. More

Plame seeks to resurrect lawsuit in CIA leak case

By MATT APUZZO, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - Former CIA operative Valerie Plame is trying to resurrect a lawsuit against those in the Bush administration she says illegally disclosed her identity.

A federal judge dismissed Plame’s lawsuit last year, saying there was no basis to bring a case. Plame’s lawyers asked a federal appeals court Friday to send the case back before the judge and force him to consider its merits.

Plame and her husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, sued Vice President Dick Cheney; his former chief of staff, I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby; former White House political adviser Karl Rove and former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage.

Plame’s CIA position was revealed in a syndicated newspaper column in 2003, during a time when her husband was criticizing the march to war in Iraq. Armitage and Rove were the original sources for that story, which Plame believes was retribution for Wilson’s criticism. More

Bob Kincaid on ‘The For-Profit Media’

Because of what I do (talk radio or, as we like to call it at The H.O.R.N., America’s Liberal Voice, “Conversation Radio”), I spend a good deal of time (probably more than is healthy, really) thinking about the media in our country.

We liberals/progressives/decent human beings have been mostly disgusted with the media’s behavior for almost my entire adult life (N.B.: I’m 45). It’s worsened to a degree almost unimaginable in the last eight years and, since March of 2007 has managed to inflame both the partisans of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, as well as the rest of us liberals/progressives/decent human beings.

With the rise of the internets and particularly blogging, a new phrase entered the lexicon: “Mainstream Media.” It has hung on like white on rice, like a dog on a bone-wagon, like a duck on a junebug, like stink on, well, never mind. You get the point.

Some folks have periodically noted that the media are anything BUT “mainstream.” The media in this country are largely owned by a consortium or perhaps sextumvirate of some six major corporations. That gave rise to the term “corporate media,” which is accurate as far as it goes.

What it doesn’t do, however, is go all the way to the vile, bilious, throbbing heart of the problem.

Now, I think I’ve found the moniker many of us have been looking for. It dawned on me last night during “The H.O.R.N. Section,” when Peter Godbold, Jon Fox and I get together for an hour on the air and sort of free-form ideas, stories and even occasional outright silliness. You can hear the archives of the H.O.R.N. Section and every other H.O.R.N. program at http://www.whiterosesociety.org/ . The live streams are always available at http://www.headonradionetwork.com , among other places.

This idea, however, struck me as anything but silly. It came from my thoughts about Dennis Kucinich’s entirely accurate description of our healthcare crisis stemming from what he called “For-profit healthcare.”

And there it was: jiggling like an overburdened toxic waste dump glistening under a blistering sun: “The For-profit Media.”

It really encapsulates everything that’s wrong with the Timmehs and Tweetys and Becks and O’Reillys and Humes and Scarboroughs and Phlegmballs and SavageWeiners and “BUYGOLDNOW and spend it on our herbal erection concocktion! Use it while sleeping on a Swedish mattress developed by NASA and clean up the mess with a vacuum cleaner that picks up bowling balls” ads that litter the Fourth Estate. At the end of the day, in the final analysis, it’s the profit motive that drives everything we loathe about American media behavior. It’s behind Fox’s incessant, obsessive use of titillating imagery. It’s what drove CBS to hire Katie Couric for FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS a year (anybody know what Murrow made at the height of his career?). It’s what jams BritneyLindsayParis Shark Attacks on Missing White Girls onto our screens nightafternightafternightafternightafternight. It’s what keeps America dumbed-down and hyped-up.

So there you have it. Make free use of it. Beat ‘em over the head with it.

The For-Profit Media.

With any luck, we can make Timmeh and Tweety start hallucinating it in their AlphaBits.

*Bob Kincaid is the host of “Head-On with Bob Kincaid“, which is heard Monday through Friday, 6pm to 9pm eastern, on The Head On Radio Network. For streaming information, please visit http://www.headonradionetwork.com .

Criminal Probe Ordered In Crandall Canyon Mine Disaster

By Thomas Burr, The Salt Lake Tribune

WASHINGTON - Crandall Canyon Mine operators may have “willfully misled” federal officials about deteriorating conditions inside the mine, and the Justice Department should launch a criminal probe against the mine’s general manager, a congressional committee report says.

House Education and Labor Chairman George Miller said Thursday he has asked the Justice Department to investigate whether mine general manager Laine Adair, “individually or in conspiracy with others, willfully concealed or covered up” or made “false representations” to federal officials about the conditions in the mine, a violation of federal law.

A Justice Department spokesman says the request has been turned over to Brett Tolman, the U.S. Attorney for Utah.

Adair’s attorney, Gregory L. Poe, said in a statement that Adair finds the call for a criminal investigation “deeply disappointing and utterly unjustified.”

Adair, along with mine co-owner Bob Murray and several other Murray Energy officials declined to be deposed by committee investigators, asserting their constitutional right against self-incrimination, the report says.

The president and a former principal of Agapito Associates, the engineering firm that advised Murray Energy on the mine plan, also were subpoenaed to testify but invoked their Fifth Amendment right as well, according to the report.

The report also says that mine officials did not properly notify federal authorities about a March collapse, called a bump, and that Adair may have “significantly downplayed” the extent of the damage. Six miners were trapped - and ultimately entombed - in the mine after a collapse on Aug. 6, and three would-be rescuers were killed and six others injured 10 days later.

An independent engineering consultant hired by the House committee says the mining plan submitted by Murray Energy subsidiary UtahAmerican Energy would have been successful if the pillars in the area were in pristine condition. However, the analysis shows it was “unlikely” the pillars were strong enough to hold up the ceiling, and notes from the Bureau of Land Management indicated deterioration in the pillars as far back as 2004.

The House committee is the third scathing report about the operations at the Crandall Canyon Mine. The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee also called for a criminal probe and the Labor Department’s independent Inspector General said the Mine Safety and Health Administration was negligent in its responsibility to oversee safety of miners there. More

Gee, not one mention about toilet paper violations. Must suck to be you, Bob Murray! Kudos again to The Salt Lake Tribune, for their wonderful, in depth coverage! -Sue

Dorgan to introduce supplement funding amendment prohibiting offshore contractors

By ELISE CASTELLI, Federal Times

A top Senate Democrat wants government contractors to stop dodging U.S. tax laws by setting up offshore firms in known tax havens.

Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., said May 7 he will offer an amendment to the fiscal 2008 emergency Defense Department supplemental to restrict any of the supplemental funds from going to firms that set up offshore subsidiaries to avoid paying U.S. taxes.

Houston-based KBR, which holds a multibillion-dollar Army logistics contract, lists its 10,500 employees working in Iraq as employees of two Cayman Island firms that don’t have phone numbers or offices, Dorgan’s statement said. Another logistics and construction firm, IAP Worldwide Services, hires Americans through offshore subsidiaries to avoid paying Social Security taxes, according to the statement. More

YAY!!!!! -Sue




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