Friday, February 22, 2013

Investigation leads to identity theft arrest | Orange County Criminal ...

A fraud investigation led Los Angeles Sheriff's Department deputies to the arrest of a woman who allegedly stole another's identity on Feb. 6. The 21-year-old suspect is said to have assumed the identity of a 70-year-old Georgia resident when she obtained $5,000 in cash advances using the woman's credit card information. She was arrested for both identity theft and grand theft and is being held in jail on a $50,000 bond.

Identity theft is a growing problem, and authorities remind everyone to be aware of all account activity on their bank and credit card statements. If any transactions seem suspect, one should report this activity immediately to both one's financial institution as well as local authorities. It is important to do this quickly as catching perpetrators of fraud often hinges on a time factor.

As sensitive personal information is increasingly disseminated in the public sphere and transmitted over sometimes insecure channels, identity theft has become one of the nation's fastest growing crimes, and consumers who are lax or careless in keeping their information secure make themselves easy targets. Penalties for identity theft under California law, however, can be severe. A first offense can carry a fine of up to $1,500, a county jail sentence of up to a year or both.

For those accused of identity theft, it is important to seek sound legal advice. Identity theft can be a serious crime, depending on the amount that was stolen. A criminal defense attorney represents those accused of identity theft and assists them in formulating a solid defense or in reducing charges by making restitution.

Source: Altadena Patch, "Altadena woman arrested for identity theft," Jessica Hamlin, Feb. 7, 2013

Source: California Penal Code, Section 530.5

Source: http://www.roncordovalaw.com/blog/2013/02/investigation-leads-to-identity-theft-arrest.shtml

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CFPB Zeroes In On Private Student Loan Crisis

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau announced Thursday that it is taking another dive into the student debt crisis. The agency will focus on refinancing options for private student loans, which represent roughly $150 billion, or one-eighth, of the overall $1 trillion education lending market.

In what the CFPB called a "first step" towards making policy recommendations to the Obama administration's Education and Treasury departments, as well as Congress, the consumer watchdog agency is soliciting input on what might make private student loan repayments more manageable and how to better assist distressed borrowers.

"If you think everything in this market is hunky-dory, you are completely missing the warning signs," CFPB Student Loan Ombudsman Rohit Chopra said in a call with reporters on Thursday. "Many of us have raised questions about the student debt domino effect on the economy."

The average student debt load grew 58 percent from 2005 to 2012, from $17,233 to $27,253, according to a recent analysis from Fair Isaac Corp. (FICO). A growing number of graduates are struggling to make their payments, and the percentage of loans more than 90 days past due continues to grow, according to FICO. Andrew Jennings, FICO chief analytics officer, recently declared the situation to be "simply unsustainable."

The CFPB believes the growing student debt burden is holding back a full economic recovery. Chopra reiterated that sentiment Thursday, and said the bureau is particularly concerned with the role student debt might play in preventing young adults from purchasing a home or car, dragging down the economy as a whole.

The rate of adults in their late twenties who own homes has slipped since 1980, The Atlantic reported. A study from the Federal Reserve found that from 2009 to 2011, only 9 percent of 29- to 34-year-olds took out their first mortgage, Bloomberg Businessweek reported. Fewer young adults are buying cars too: According to new data released from the Pew Research Center Thursday, 32 percent of households headed by an adult younger than 35 were paying off auto loans in 2010, down from 44 percent in 2007.

The burden of private student loans -- with rates often between 8 and 15 percent -- is "one piece of the broader student debt puzzle that must be solved," Chopra said.

"Many borrowers who have obtained employment and are making good money are not able to refinance and lock in a good rate," he added.

In previous reports, the CFPB has characterized private student lending as having an "uncanny resemblance" to the subprime housing market. The bureau also has suggested that Congress revisit a 2005 change in bankruptcy laws that makes it nearly impossible to discharge private student loans in bankruptcy.

"We will be analyzing plans for policymakers to consider that might help avoid a repeat of the mortgage meltdown for today?s student loan borrowers," CFPB Director Richard Cordray said in a statement.

However, the options the federal government might pursue are more limited than the ones available for students with federal loans, where income-based repayment plans and options for debt forgiveness have already been instituted.

Chopra said solutions for private loan programs might include offerings available to those taking on other kinds of debt, like temporary offers of interest rate reductions or interest-only payments. Those ideas may or may not be applicable in this market, Chopra said.

A call by the CFPB in 2012 for public input on problems with private student loans resulted in more than 2,000 comments, which were released in June. The CFPB will be accepting comments about refinancing private student debt until April 8, 2013.

What problems have you experienced with your student loan debt? Share your story with HuffPost and add it to the slideshow below:

  • Brittany Baker, Allegheny College/Sarah Lawrence College

    I'm all for paying high prices for good value -- and my education was certainly of quality -- but I'm not in the market to be abused. From interest rates to the ease of borrowing, to confusion of terms and steadily climbing price of college tuition, I guess I have to thank all of the higher education system while I have the floor to speak. To the loan companies, the banks and private colleges: thank you. I and my peers will forever be indebted to you. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/brittany-baker/debt-up-to-my-neck_b_945267.html" target="_hplink">Read more...</a>

  • Quinn Anderson, Boise State

    As an average, working-class, white American male who is neither left-handed nor a great athlete, the options for scholarships available to me have always been slim. Combine that with my parents' income -- which is above Pell Grant eligibility and too high to be considered for greater loan amounts -- and you get my situation. At the end of the spring 2012 semester I will be $50,000 plus in debt, which means I will have reached my loan cap for borrowing. With a credit rating that sunk to an embarrassing low years ago, there is no way for me to borrow using private loans to finance my education. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/quinn-anderson/quinn-anderson-27-boise-s_b_943879.html" target="_hplink">Read more...</a>

  • Laquinda Settles, New York Institute of Technology

    I graduated from the New York Institute of Technology in May 2010 with a degree in Communication Arts; I am currently working 2 part-time jobs with no benefits and making $12 an hour. I'm also so over my head in debt with college loans. It's to the point that I'm considering filing for bankruptcy. I went to college to educate myself and make more money, but it feels like I dug my own grave. College is one of the biggest scams in the world; some of these institutions charge students between $700-$800 per credit for an undergrad degree. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/laquinda-settles/a-degree-in-hand-but-what_b_951098.html" target="_hplink">Read more...</a>

  • Aleesha Nash, New York University

    I am a 31-year old woman originally from Ohio working and living in New York City area. I graduated with a Master's degree in Speech and Interpersonal Communications from New York University's Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development in 2007. Logging into the Federal Student Aid website I see that today my balance is $104,104.63 for a percentage of the information in my head. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/aleesha-nash/debt-thats-worth-it_b_945223.html" target="_hplink">Read more...</a>

  • Jaclyn Cabral, Elon University

    I am a recent graduate from Elon University, a private school in North Carolina, and have $90,808 of college debt. Though my debt seems extremely high, Elon is also regarded as one of the most affordable private college educations. My story dates back to high school where my parents worked opposing shifts simply to make ends meet. I knew since middle school that I would go to a great college and venture away from my hometown. My motivation during the past 17 years of my educational career was to do well, go to a great college and then have no problem landing my dream job. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jaclyn-cabral/post_2357_b_945238.html" target="_hplink">Read more...</a>

  • Mike Newman, Ohio State University

    I graduated from the Ohio State University with a fine arts degree in 2004. This is what I settled on after changing my major four times in my first three years at school. Clearly college wasn't for me, but I finished it because I wanted to make my parents proud and thought it would improve my life. Neither of my parents went to college, but they managed a pretty good life for themselves. Like all loving parents they wanted me to have a better life than them and were duped into believing that college was the answer. From the first day in elementary school to my last day in high school, we believed the myth that college was the only real path to success. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mike-newman/forced-to-fall-off-the-gr_b_945263.html" target="_hplink">Read more...</a>

  • Brandon Woods, Hampton University

    I turned down a full ride at Michigan State (a school that ranks in the top 20 in my field, education) to get the HBCU (Historically Black College and University) experience at Hampton University. It was the best thing I could have done as far as experiences go, but the worst for my finances. They say you can't put a price on experience, but I can. Roughly $24,000 my freshman year, and it only got more expensive every year after that. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/brandon-woods/i-should-have-listened-to_b_951080.html" target="_hplink">Read more...</a>

  • Erin Dunphy, Ithaca College

    I grew up with an insatiable need to explore the world around me. So I knew when I was going to go to college I was going to do two things: One, major in journalism and two, leave my home. It was time for me to blaze my own path. I had worked hard throughout high school and did all those things they tell you to do to get as much money out of the process as possible. I was an honors graduate and was involved in almost every kind of extracurricular activity. I did my best to be the girl any college would want -- and therefore would hopefully give money that she wouldn't have to pay back. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/erin-dunphy/excited-for-the-future-ev_b_945253.html" target="_hplink">Read more....</a>

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/21/cfpb-private-student-loans_n_2734065.html?utm_hp_ref=college&ir=College

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Why consumer watchdog agency still has no chief

Senate Republicans have vowed to block President Obama?s nomination of Richard Cordray to become director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau unless Congress takes steps that would weaken the agency.

In a recent letter to the White House, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and 42 GOP colleagues said they will continue to oppose the consideration ?of any nominee, regardless of party affiliation? until changes are made to ?ensure accountability and transparency? at the CFPB.

Sen. McConnell said Republicans have ?serious concerns about the lack of congressional oversight of the agency and the lack of normal, democratic checks on its sole director, who would wield nearly unprecedented powers.?

Consumer groups and Democrats on Capitol Hill are outraged at what they believe is a blatant attempt to muzzle the consumer watchdog agency.

?They?re playing politics with the pocketbooks of the American people and the safety of our economy,? said consumer advocate Ed Mierzwinski of U.S. PIRG.

?Republicans are trying to dismantle the consumer protection bureau and put the power back in the hands of big corporations,? said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., in a statement. ?American consumers deserve a cop on the beat to advocate for their interests against reckless corporations and their armies of lawyers seeking to take advantage.?

The outcome of this power struggle will affect all Americans because the CFPB regulates the businesses that control so much of our financial lives, including banks, credit card issuers, mortgage lenders, debt collectors and credit reporting agencies.

In just 19 months, the agency has issued numerous rules designed to bring fairness and transparency to the financial marketplace. It has also levied record fines against some of the biggest financial companies in the country, resulting in $425 million being refunded to consumers.

What exactly do GOP lawmakers want?

Republicans say they want Congress to change the CFPB?s governance, funding and oversight before they will vote on a director for the agency.

  1. Governance: They want the CFPB to be run by a five-member bipartisan commission, rather than a director.
  2. Funding: They want the bureau to be subject to the annual appropriations process in Congress.
  3. Oversight: They want to make it easier for other federal banking regulators to veto any CFPB rule.

George Washington University law professor Arthur Wilmarth, Jr. wrote an analysis of the proposed changes in a paper titled: ?The Financial Services Industry?s Misguided Quest to Undermine the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.? Here?s how he addressed the GOP?s proposed changes:

1. Governance

There are reasonable arguments on both sides as to whether the agency should be run by a director or a commission. While a single director increases accountability, a bipartisan commission might include a broader range of views. But the commission structure increases the possibility of deadlock if a single position is vacant.

Weighing all the factors ? efficiency, stability, decisiveness and accountability ? Prof. Wilmarth concluded that keeping a single-director makes the most sense.

2. Funding

Currently, the CFPB?s budget comes from the Federal Reserve and is capped at 12 percent of the Board?s budget each year.

If the CFPB does not have guaranteed funding and must seek Congressional budget approval each year, it is subject to Congressional whim and therefore pressure from business groups.

?The two agencies that don?t have assured funding ? the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission ? the industry strangles them through the appropriations process and makes them unable to accomplish their mission,? Wilmarth explained. ?Obviously, the industry wants this because they don?t want the CFPB to be effective.?

3. Oversight

The federal law that created the CFPB already defines and limits its regulatory powers. It establishes various layers of oversight. The agency reports to Congress (so far Corday has testified 30 times) and is watched by the General Accounting Office.

The CFPB ? unlike any other financial regulatory agency ? is also subject to review by the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) which can veto any bureau rule that?s shown to put ?the safety and soundness? of the U.S. banking system or the ?stability? of the U.S. financial system at risk.

Republicans want to give the FSOC the power to veto any CFPB rule that negatively impacts even a single bank or financial institution.

Wilmarth believes this would make it too easy to override CFPB actions and would give responsibility for consumer protection back to ?the same agencies that failed to protect both consumers and our financial markets during the past decade.?

Democrats go on the offensive

Three Democratic members of the Senate Banking Committee, Jack Reed of Rhode Island, Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, have called on their Republican colleagues to put Cordray?s nomination to an up-or-down vote.

Confirming a CFPB director would ?help consumers and strengthen our financial marketplace,? they said in a joint news release.

Sen. Warren knows more about this issue than most members of Congress. She?s the former Harvard professor who helped launch the CFPB in 2010 after it was created as part of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.

She warned that this latest example of Congressional gridlock hurts everyone.

?Political stalemates don?t end in more government or less government, but in bad government ? government that lacks the clarity and predictability that our businesses need to plan for the future, to serve their customers, and to create jobs,? Warren said.

Herb Weisbaum is The ConsumerMan. Follow him on Facebook and Twitteror visit The ConsumerMan website.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/why-consumer-watchdog-agency-still-has-no-chief-1C8452387

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Estimates raised for Russian meteor blast

Yekaterina Pustynnikova / Chelyabinsk.ru via AP

Click through scenes from Russia's Chelyabinsk region, where a huge meteor fireball set off alarms, injured hundreds of people and caused a factory roof to collapse.

By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

Scientists have raised their estimates of the size and power of what turns out to be the most widely witnessed asteroid strike in modern history. The size estimate puts the object that caused Friday's meteor blast over Russia in a troublesome category of asteroids: big enough to cause damage, but small enough to evade detection.

The new estimates, based on additional readings from a sensor network built to detect nuclear blasts, suggest the meteor released the energy equivalent of nearly 500 kilotons of TNT. That's about 30 times the power of the Hiroshima atomic bomb.


Experts have been assessing the level of the meteor explosion using a network of infrasound sensors that were set up under the terms of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty to check for changes in atmospheric pressure caused by nuclear blasts. "These new estimates were generated using new data that had been collected by five additional infrasound stations located around the world ? the first recording of the event being in Alaska, over 6,500 kilometers away from Chelyabinsk," NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory said in a statement.

NASA now says the Chelyabinsk object must have been about 55 feet wide (17 meters wide) with a mass of 10,000 tons before it entered Earth?s atmosphere.

"We would expect an event of this magnitude to occur once every 100 years on average,"Paul Chodas of NASA's Near-Earth Object Program Office said in the statement. "When you have a fireball of this size, ?we would expect a large number of meteorites to reach the surface, and in this case there were probably some large ones."

Searchers have been focusing on a frozen lake about 50 miles (80 kilometers) west of Chelyabinsk, where they suspect meteorite fragments made a 20-foot-wide (6-meter-wide) hole in the ice. Divers explored the bottom of the lake on Saturday but have found nothing so far, according to Russian news reports.

Experts emphasized once again that the meteor's trajectory was significantly different from the path of asteroid 2012 DA14, a 150-foot-wide (45-meter-wide) space rock that passed within 17,200 miles (27,600 kilometers) of Earth later Friday. Thus, 2012 DA14 was "a completely unrelated object," NASA said.

The space agency said Friday's Russian meteor was the largest reported since 1908, when an asteroid roughly the size of 2012 DA14 exploded over a remote wooded area in Siberia's Tunguska region. That blast flattened millions of trees over a 820-square-mile area, but was not widely seen. Friday's event, in contrast, took place over a city of 1.1 million inhabitants, and hundreds of millions more watched the videos that were distributed over the Internet.

As powerful as the meteor blast was, it's on the low end of the asteroid impact scale. Astronomers estimate that there are about a million potentially hazardous near-Earth objects smaller than 100 meters (330 feet) in width, and only about 1 percent of those have been cataloged. For the time being, NASA has been focusing on detecting and tracking near-Earth asteroids wider than 100 meters. As for the detecting the smaller ones, "that is something that is not currently our goal," Chodas told reporters on Friday.

The asteroid behind Friday's blast would have been particularly hard to detect during its final approach because it was coming from Earth's daylit side. That made it undetectable by the current ground-based telescopes, because it would have been lost in the sun's glare, said Bill Cooke, the head of the Meteoroid Environment Center at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center.

Several programs on the horizon hold the promise of finding the smaller asteroids that could threaten Earth:

  • NASA has just started funding the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System, or ATLAS, which aims to establish two telescopes in Hawaii dedicated to scanning the skies for potential threats.
  • The non-profit B612 Foundation has been raising money to launch its Sentinel Space Telescope as early as 2017. Sentinel would scan Earth's surroundings from an outward-looking position in a Venus-like orbit, interior to Earth's orbit. Such a project could provide advance warning for asteroids like the one that blew up on Friday. Former Apollo astronaut Rusty Schweickart, one of the foundation's founders, said he was "overwhelmed" by requests for information after Friday's blast. "It's pretty bonkers at the moment," he told NBC News.
  • Planetary Resources, a commercial venture, is developing a fleet of Arkyd-100 space telescopes to identify near-Earth asteroids, in hopes of sending mining operations to them in the decades to come. "As the company ultimately develops the capability and infrastructure for intercepting and mining asteroids, Planetary Resources expects to be able to help in the (slight) redirection of these rocks to keep the Earth safe," Peter Diamandis, the company's co-founder and co-chairman, said in a blog posting.
  • Another commercial space-mining venture, Deep Space Industries, is proposing its own set of asteroid-hunting space telescopes. "Placing 10 of our small FireFly spacecraft into position to intercept close encounters would take four years and less than $100 million," David Gump, the company's CEO, said in a statement. "This will help the world develop the understanding needed to block later threats."

Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/16/16985690-estimates-raised-for-nuclear-sized-asteroid-blast-that-hit-russia?lite

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Bomb rips through Pakistan market, killing at least 63

QUETTA, Pakistan (AP) ? A bomb hidden in a water tank ripped through a crowded vegetable market in a mostly Shiite neighborhood in a southwestern Pakistani city Saturday, killing at least 63 people and wounding some 180, officials said.

Police said many of those wounded in the explosion in Quetta remain in critical condition. The blast, which police said targeted the country's minority Muslim sect, left many victims buried under rubble, but authorities did not know how many.

It was the deadliest incident since bombings in the same city killed 86 people earlier this year, leading to days of protests that eventually toppled the local government.

Shiites, a minority in this Sunni Muslim dominated country, have been increasingly attacked by militant groups who view them as heretics and non-Muslims. Many of the Shiites in Quetta, including those in the neighborhood attacked Saturday, are Hazaras, an ethnic group that migrated to Pakistan from Afghanistan more than a century ago.

Quetta police chief Zubair Mahmood told reporters that the bomb was hidden in a water tank and towed into the market by a tractor. He said the blast destroyed shops in the neighborhood and caused a two-story building to collapse.

"We fear some victims may be found buried there," he said.

Mahmood said police did not yet know who was behind the bombing but a local television station reported that Lashker-e-Jhangvi, a Sunni extremist group that has targeted Shiites in the past, had called to claim responsibility.

Senior police officer Wazir Khan Nasir said the bomb, set off in a residential suburb, was detonated by remote control.

Another officer, Samiullah Khan, said the bomb was detonated while dozens of women and children were buying produce for their evening meal. Local residents rushed the victims to three different area hospitals.

A massive plume of white smoke rose over the area after the bomb blast. Television footage of the scene showed the rubble of the destroyed buildings mixed with fruits and vegetables and shattered street carts scattered across the ground.

Near one of the hospitals where the dead and wounded were taken, a man stood weeping as people were being taken in on stretchers.

"Look at our misery! We are helpless," he said.

Members of the minority Shiite sect took to the city streets in angry protest, blocking roads with burning tires and throwing stones at passing vehicles.

Many also started firing into the air in an attempt to keep people away from the area in case there was a secondary explosion. Sometimes insurgents stagger the explosions as a way to target people who rush to the scene to help and thus increase the death toll.

Police cordoned off the area. Most of the Shiites in the area are Hazaras, and they were quick to blame Lashker-e-Jhangvi.

"This evil force is operating with the patronage of certain elements in the province," said Qayum Changezi, the chairman of a local Hazara organization.

Saturday's attack was the worst since a series of bombings on Jan. 10 killed 86 people in Quetta, almost all Hazara Shiites. Residents were so furious that they refused to bury their dead for days, instead camping out on the streets with the bodies in coffins in protest and demanding the government address the problem.

After days of protests, Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf flew to the city to meet with protesters and sacked the chief minister and his cabinet. But Saturday's attack showed the still potent power of the militant groups behind such incidents.

Quetta is the capital of Baluchistan province, where the Shiite minority has been attacked several times in recent months. Baluch nationalist groups are fighting an insurgency there to try to gain a greater share of income from the province's gas and mineral resources. Islamic militants are also active in the province.

Lashkar-e-Jhangvi is one of the more vicious militant groups operating in the country. They took their name after a firebrand Sunni cleric who gave virulently anti-Shiite sermons.

Pakistan's intelligence agencies helped nurture Sunni militant groups like Lashkar-e-Jhangvi in the 1980s and 1990s to counter a perceived threat from neighboring Iran, which is mostly Shiite. Pakistan banned Lashkar-e-Jhangvi in 2001, but the group continues to operate fairly freely.

Last year was particularly deadly for Shiites in Pakistan. According to Human Rights Watch, more than 400 were killed in targeted attacks across the country. The human rights group said over 125 were killed in Baluchistan province, most of whom belonged to the Hazara community.

Rights groups have accused the government of not doing enough to protect Shiites in the country.

__

Associated Press writers Zarar Khan contributed to this report from Islamabad.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bomb-rips-pakistan-market-killing-63-171115510.html

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Tweet Lanes goes open-source, looking for a few good devs

Tweet Lanes

It's been a few months since we got the bad news that active development was to cease on Twitter app Tweet Lanes, but developer Chris Lacy today did announce that the app still has a future. Lacy is open-sourcing the code not only for the Tweet Lanes client, but also its SocialNetLib library (which works with App.net as well), as well as his AppEngine of things.

"My sincerest hope is that by releasing this code, the community can give Tweet Lanes the time and attention that it deserves," Lacy wrote today on Google+.

While he won't be actively developing Tweet Lanes, he is committing to syncing with the master branch of the project and releasing signed versions of the app to Google Play "a few times a week," meaning you'd still be able to get updates in the usual manner.

Lacy's looking for some dev leads for the project as well as a community manager. Hit the links below if you can help out.

In the meantime, the app was updated today to comply with the Twitter API v1.1, and a couple other behind-the-scenes things. (See the changelog here.)

Source: +Chris Lacy; More: Tweet Lanes github



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/sVV-8-AW-l8/story01.htm

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Dirty Ship, Sick Passengers: Inside the Carnival Triumph

After spending five days adrift in the Gulf Mexico after an engine fire knocked out the Carnival Triumph's power, relieved passengers finally disembarked on Friday.

Some kissed the ground in relief after tug boats pulled the crippled ship into port in Mobile, Ala., and guests once again stood on dry land. Passengers described an unbearable smell on the ship due to overflowing toilets and drain pipes that soaked many interior passages and cabins.

Following the cruise debacle, Carnival said passengers would be reimbursed fully for the vacation in addition to transportation expenses, a credit for a future cruise, and $500 cash ? an amount that was not enough, some guests said.

"There are lost wages, I've got a baby sitter at home and I had to take off work," told Robin Chandler, who celebrated her 50th birthday on the ship, to Reuters.

Click ahead to see scenes from the Carnival Triumph's cruise gone awry.

?Written by Katie Little
Posted 15 February 2013

Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/100461957

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Stock Upgrades: Future Looks Bright For Pacific Sunwear - Minyanville

Who needs Paris when you?ve got, er, Pittsburgh? On Valentine?s Day, investors fell further in love with Steel City, fresh from it being?anointed the unlikeliest of romantic capitals. Two of its icons bucked an otherwise desultory trading session, with condiment king H.J. Heinz?(HNZ) surging 19.87% and?Alcoa?(AA) easily besting all?Blue Chips?(^DJI) by advancing 2.09%.
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Elsewhere the timeless seduction adage of ?candy is dandy but liquor is quicker? proved decent investment advice as confectionery company?Nestl??(PINK:NSRGY) tumbled 2.09% even as winemaker?Constellation Brands?(STZ) jumped 37.23%.
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For those not in a committed relationship, an evening of friends with benefits saw alcohol outfit?Anheuser-Busch?(BUD) rise 5.10% so Paul Simon was right when he said there are indeed 50 ways to lose your liver. And electric utility?Entergy?(ETR), which did so much to boost the business of candlelit dinners with?its blackout at the Super Bowl, tumbled 2.92% to a fresh 52-week trough on a?ratings reduction.
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It?s a fairly busy Friday ahead of the long weekend, with stock markets closed on Monday for Presidents' Day. This morning in economics, we get the University of Michigan?s preliminary consumer confidence figure for February at 9:55 a.m. Eastern. In earnings action, Aegon (AEG), Anglo American?(PINK: AAUKY),?Campbell Soup (CPB), Commerzbank (PINK:CRZBY), ENI SpA (E), Forum Energy Technology (FET), IPG Photonics (IPGP), Kraft Foods (KRFT), TRW Automotive (TRW), and V.F. Corporation?(VFC) are all due to report results.
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Ahold: (PINK:AHONY): Cantor Fitzgerald raises its recommendation on the Dutch grocery giant to Buy from Hold.
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HJ Heinz?(HNZ): The ketchup king, now in Warren Buffett?s pantry after yesterday being bought for $28 billion or $72.50 a share in cash, is increased to Neutral from Sell at Goldman Sachs.
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inContact Inc.?(SAAS): Pointing to the firm?s better than expected earnings and forward guidance, Roth Capital raises its recommendation to Buy from Neutral with a $7.50 price target.
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Kinross Gold?(KGC) Credit Suisse hoists the commodity company to Outperform from Neutral with an $11.50 price objective. Its valuation is seen as compelling at current levels. Shares are up before the bell as a result.
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NETGEAR?(NTGR): Shares get a Buy-from-Neutral boost at Sterne Agee.
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Nokia?(NOK): Nordea boosts the Scandinavian telecom titan to Strong Buy from Buy.
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Pacific Sunwear of California?(NASDAQ:PSUN): The stock is now Buy from Neutral at DA Davidson, which notes an improved merchandising mix and potential acceleration in same-store-sales. Its target is also taken up to $3.50 from $2.20.
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Precision Drilling?(PDS): Raymond James juices its rating to Outperform from Market Perform after a strong earnings announcement.
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Valspar?(VAL): VAL is upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at First Analysis.

(See also: New Stock Coverage: GPS Giant Garmin Finds a Friend and Stock Downgrades: Stop Hoarding Storage Stocks.)

No positions in stocks mentioned.

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Source: http://www.minyanville.com/trading-and-investing/stocks/articles/Stock-Upgrades253A-Future-Looks-Bright-For/2/15/2013/id/48153

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Yves Engler: Harper's Keystone Lobbying Is Tarring Canada's Good Name

On February 17, Presidents Day, tens of thousands are set to converge on the White House in what organizers are promoting as "the largest climate rally in U.S. history." The protesters will be calling on Barack Obama to reject the Keystone XL pipeline. For the first time in its 120 year history, the million member Sierra Club has endorsed civil disobedience actions on that day.

Alongside one of this country's biggest corporations, Stephen Harper's government has entangled Canada in one of the most controversial decisions of Obama's presidency. The Conservatives have lobbied vigorously in support of Calgary-based TransCanada's plan to build a $7-billion pipeline to take up to 800,000 barrels of oil a day from Alberta to refineries on the Gulf Coast. The prime minister has pressed Obama to approve Keystone XL while his ministers have visited Washington to pursue the matter with the Secretary of State. During two visits to Washington in recent weeks foreign minister John Baird said Keystone XL was his main priority.

Canada's ambassador in Washington, Gary Doer, has also spent a large amount of his time pushing the pipeline, prompting TransCanada to send him a "thank you" note on August 30, 2011. "Gary," reads an email from the pipeline firm, "I just wanted to send a quick note to thank you and your team for all of the hard work and perseverance in helping get us this far, I know it has made a big difference."

The ambassador responded to critical media commentary and pressed state officials to support the pipeline. When Nebraska's Republican governor Dave Heineman initially came out against the project Doer visited him in Omaha. Similarly, the 28 members of Congress who urged the State Department to consider the "major environmental and health hazards" posed by Keystone XL received an immediate letter from Canada's ambassador and Alberta's minister of intergovernmental relations. "I believe it necessary to address several points in your letter," Doer wrote. The ambassador's letter trumpeted Canada's plan to reduce overall greenhouse gas emissions 17 percent below 2005 levels by 2020. "[This is] a benchmark we intend to meet," Doer wrote, even though planned tar sands expansion will make this objective impossible to reach.

Canada's 22 consular offices in the U.S. have also been instructed to take up the "energy advocacy" cause. When the New York Times ran an editorial titled "Say No to the Keystone XL" Canada's consul general in New York wrote a letter supporting the project.

TransCanada has been equally aggressive in its lobbying. Last week the company's chief executive Russ Girling told reporters in Washington that rejecting the pipeline would be "the craziest thing I could think of for the largest consumer of oil on Earth."

The company has spent millions to convince federal and state politicians. In Nebraska alone TransCanada has spent almost $1 million lobbying lawmakers and also helped set up a non-profit called Nebraskans for Jobs and Energy Independence. The group paid for a robocall that contained the following: "Please Press 1 now to authorize us to send a letter to Secretary of State Hilary Clinton in support of the Keystone XL Pipeline, which will help to lower gas prices, create American jobs and reduce our dependence on foreign oil."

On the other side environmentalists have used social media and traditional protests to heap scorn on TransCanada and Canada. A November 23 New York Times article headlined "Pipeline Protest Draws Pepper Spray From Deputies" reported on protests outside Wells, Texas. The paper reported that 40 protesters "chanted 'Go back to Canada' and waved signs with messages like ... 'Don't mix Canadian tar with Texas water.'"

Many Canadians share American environmentalists' concerns about the tar sands' ecological footprint. But, even those who do not should worry about the impact the Harper government's lobbying will have on this country's reputation.

Once upon a time Canada was seen as a beacon to progressive Americans. What will we be known for in years to come?

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/yves-engler/keystone-pipeline-harper_b_2688787.html?utm_hp_ref=green&ir=Green

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Rapper 2 Chainz Arrested For Weed Possession

Rapper 2 Chainz Arrested For Weed Possession

Rapper 2 Chainz picturesRapper 2 Chainz, whose real name is Tauheed Epps, was arrested in Maryland on Thursday night for marijuana possession. The “No Lie” later tweeted about the incident, slamming state troopers for asking for a photo with him after the arrest. The rapper was pulled over by Maryland State Police while driving in a white van ...

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Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/02/rapper-2-chainz-arrested-for-weed-possession/

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