Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Turkish womb transplant woman 6 weeks pregnant

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) ? A hospital says a Turkish woman who became the first person to successfully receive a donor womb is six weeks into a "healthy" pregnancy.

Derya Sert was born without a womb and had one transplanted in August 2011. Using one of her own eggs, doctors placed an embryo into the 22-year-old's womb in March.

A statement from Akdeniz University Hospital on Monday said doctors have monitored a fetal heartbeat and that the pregnancy is going well.?

A successful birth would provide hope for women who were born without a womb or who lose it to disease.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/turkish-womb-transplant-woman-6-weeks-pregnant-141502982.html

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Suspect in biggest cyberattack in Internet history arrested

April 29 (Infostrada Sports) - Results and standings from the Russian championship matches on Monday Monday, April 29 Alania Vladikavkaz 2 FK Krasnodar 3 Sunday, April 28 Kuban Krasnodar 2 Zenit St Petersburg 2 Rubin Kazan 2 CSKA Moscow 0 Spartak Moscow 2 Anzhi Makhachkala 0 Saturday, April 27 Dynamo Moscow 3 Mordovya Saransk 1 Lokomotiv Moscow 3 Rostov 1 Terek Groznyi 2 Amkar Perm 1 Friday, April 26 FC Volga Nizhny Novgorod 1 Krylya Sovietov Samara 1 Standings P W D L F A Pts 1 CSKA Moscow 26 18 3 5 44 21 57 -------------------------2 Zenit St Petersburg 26 16 6 4 45 23 54 ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/suspect-biggest-cyberattack-internet-history-arrested-185532752.html

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Alfredo Saenz Abad, Spain's Banco Santander CEO, Resigns After ...

MADRID -- The chief executive of Spain's Banco Santander SA, Alfredo Saenz Abad, has resigned in the latest twist of a long-running legal battle.

Saenz was named vice-chairman and chief executive of Santander 2002, according to a statement from the bank Monday. During that time the Santander Group has nearly quadrupled in size to become the eurozone's largest bank by market capitalization.

He will be replaced by the head of Santander's private banking and insurance arm, Javier Marin Romano.

Saenz's position as CEO had been in question since he was sentenced to six months in 2009 on charges of making false accusations while chairman of Banesto bank in the early 1990s. The sentence was reduced to three months and he was later pardoned by the government in 2011.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/29/alfredo-saenz-abad-resigns_n_3179707.html

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Two policemen shot as new Italy government sworn in

By Gavin Jones and Roberto Landucci

ROME (Reuters) - Enrico Letta was sworn in as Italy's new prime minister on Sunday and immediately faced an emergency after an unemployed man shot two police officers outside his office.

The 49 year-old gunman, from the poor southern region of Calabria, told investigators he had planned to attack politicians but had found none within range.

One of the officers was shot in the neck, hitting his spinal cord, and he was in a serious condition, surgeons said. The other was shot in the leg.

In a surreal scene, outgoing Prime Minister Mario Monti received the official trumpet salute in the courtyard of the renaissance Chigi palace before walking across the cordoned-off square, past police crouching over the scene of the shooting, looking for evidence.

There were immediate calls for parties to try to calm a heated public mood that has been exacerbated by deep political divisions as Italy languishes in its longest recession for 20 years and has been without a proper government for months.

"Our politicians have to start providing solutions to the social crisis and to peoples' needs because the crisis transforms victims into killers like the man who shot today," said lower house speaker Laura Boldrini.

"There's a social emergency that needs answers and our politicians have to start giving them."

Letta, 46, who will set out his program in parliament on Monday, has said his first task will be to tackle the economy which has contracted for six consecutive quarters and pushed youth unemployment close to 40 percent.

Official data this month showed that alongside Italy's 2.7 million officially unemployed in 2012, there were 3 million more who were so demoralized they had given up the search for work, a far higher number than in any other EU country.

The gunman's home town of Rosarno has a jobless rate far above the national average and is renowned for the activities of the local mafia, the 'Ndrangheta, and riots by African immigrants paid a pittance to collect the local fruit harvest.

"SHOOT ME"

Having fired several shots at the police on duty outside the prime minister's office, the man, dressed in a suit, shouted "shoot me, shoot me" to other officers nearby, police said.

Letta, on the right of his center-left Democratic Party (PD), ended two months of stalemate that followed an inconclusive general election by uniting political rivals in a broad coalition government.

The mix of center-right and center-left politicians and unaffiliated technocrats has a record number of seven female ministers and is made up by relative youngsters in an attempt to respond to public disillusion with the political elite.

But the continued risk of political instability was spelled out by an ally of center-right leader Silvio Berlusconi.

Renato Brunetta, lower house leader of Berlusconi's People of Freedom party (PDL), said the government would fall unless Letta promised in his maiden speech to swiftly abolish an unpopular housing tax and repay the 2012 levy to taxpayers.

"If the prime minister doesn't make this precise commitment we will not give him our support in the vote of confidence," following the speech, Brunetta told daily Il Messaggero.

He said that during negotiations for the formation of the government Letta had "given his word" on the abolition and repayment of the tax, which would gouge an 8-billion-euro hole in public accounts.

New Economy Minister Fabrizio Saccomanni, formerly deputy governor of Italy's central bank, said he wanted to cut public spending and taxes, but made no reference to the housing tax.

DISCREDITED

In the election, Italians vented their anger at a discredited political class by giving 25 percent of votes to the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement led by former comic Beppe Grillo, which refused to join any coalition.

Divisions have deepened since the vote, with millions of center-left voters upset, first by a bad split inside the PD and then by the party's decision to govern with Berlusconi after its leadership, including Letta, had ruled out that possibility.

Berlusconi, widely written off after being forced from office in 2011 at the height of a debt crisis, is now a vital part of the ruling majority and has placed several ministers in the cabinet, including the PDL's national secretary Angelino Alfano as deputy prime minister and interior minister.

Recent polls give him a lead of between five and eight percentage points over the center-left, and many commentators believe he may bring down the government as soon as he is fully confident of winning an election.

(Additional reporting by James Mackenzie and Antonella Cinelli; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/italian-government-under-enrico-letta-sworn-094720376.html

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Tony Award nominations may have a British accent

NEW YORK (AP) ? Two stories born in Britain are vying for America's biggest theater prize.

"Kinky Boots" and "Matilda" are each a virtual lock to get a Tony Award nomination Tuesday for best musical and each show will be eager to capture as many nods as possible in the other 25 categories.

The nominations will be announced from The New York Public Library for Performing Arts in a televised event co-hosted by Tony winner Sutton Foster and "Modern Family" star Jesse Tyler Ferguson.

"Kinky Boots" is based on the 2005 British movie about a real-life shoe factory that struggles until it finds new life in fetish footwear. Songs by pop icon Cyndi Lauper and a story by Harvey Fierstein have made it a crowd-pleaser, albeit in open-minded New York. Touring potential is key for Tony voters.

"Matilda," the import from London, is a witty musical adaptation of the beloved novel by Roald Dahl and is true to his bleak vision of childhood as a savage battleground. It has proven it can find audiences on both sides of the Atlantic.

The other contenders for the best musical prize ? the biggest reward on Tony night? include the peppy "Bring It On: The Musical" the hit-stuffed "Motown: The Musical," the quick-to-close "Hands on a Hardbody" and the sweet "A Christmas Story, The Musical."

"Kinky Boots" and "Matilda" also have a good chance of nabbing nominations in the best musical actor category, with some interesting drag involved for both shows' leading men, who both wear skirts onstage. British actor Bertie Carvel plays a brutal headmistress in "Matilda" and Billy Porter plays a drag queen in "Kinky Boots."

Others who may get a nod include Rob McClure as the lead in "Chaplin," Matthew James Thomas in "Pippin," Brandon Victor Dixon in "Motown: The Musical" and Jim Norton in "The Mystery of Edwin Drood." Porter's co-star Stark Sands might also get a nomination.

The best play category is stuffed, but only four can make it. The leading lights include Richard Greenberg's "The Assembled Parties," Sharr White's "The Other Place" and Christopher Durang's "Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike."

Others with a real possibility include Colm Toibin's "The Testament of Mary," Nora Ephron's "Lucky Guy," Douglas Carter Beane's "The Nance," Craig Wright's "Grace," Holland Taylor's "Ann" and John Logan's "I'll Eat You Last: A Chat With Sue Mengers."

Leading the best musical revival group is "Rodgers + Hammerstein's Cinderella" and "Pippin." Others hoping to fill out the four slots will be a solid "Annie," the brash "Jekyll & Hyde" and the rollicking "The Mystery of Edwin Drood."

The best play revival is as competitive as the new play category, with Horton Foote's "The Trip to Bountiful," Clifford Odets' "Golden Boy," Edward Albee's "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" and a one-man "Macbeth" in hot contention. Others include David Mamet's "Glengarry Glen Ross" and William Inge's "Picnic."

Leading actress in a play nominees may likely include Bette Midler from "I'll Eat You Last," Jessica Hecht in "The Assembled Parties," Cicely Tyson in "The Trip to Bountiful," Kristine Nielsen from "Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike," Laurie Metcalf in "The Other Place" and Fiona Shaw from "The Testament of Mary." Other possibilities are Sigourney Weaver, Scarlett Johansson, Holland Taylor and Amy Morton.

On the male side, best actor in a play contenders include Nathan Lane for "The Nance," Tracy Letts of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" Tom Hanks in "Lucky Guy," Alan Cumming in "Macbeth" and David Hyde Pierce from "Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike." Others with a shot include Douglas Hodge, Bobby Cannavale, Michael Shannon, and Alec Baldwin.

Top actresses in a musical likely will include Patina Miller from "Pippin," Laura Osnes of "Rodgers + Hammerstein's Cinderella" and Valisia LeKae in "Motown: The Musical," Lilla Crawford from "Annie" and Stephanie J. Block of "The Mystery of Edwin Drood."

All four girls who rotate as the lead in "Matilda" ? Sophia Gennusa, Oona Laurence, Bailey Ryon and Milly Shapiro ? were deemed ineligible, although in London the four actresses there each took home the Oliver Award.

Some 870 Tony voters will decide the final awards after the nominees are revealed. The Broadway League and the American Theatre Wing, joint producers of the show, will host the glittery ceremony from Radio City Music Hall on June 9. It will be broadcast live by CBS. Only Broadway shows that opened since April 26, 2012, are eligible.

___

Online: http://www.TonyAwards.com

___

Follow Mark Kennedy on Twitter at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tony-award-nominations-may-british-accent-185157191.html

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Monday, April 29, 2013

Google Now for iOS hands-on

Google Now for iOS handson

Google Now is, perhaps, one of the more compelling reasons to opt for an Android device over iOS. But, Mountain View is smart enough to realize that its big push to deliver information pre-emptively would be severely hampered if it was isolated to one platform. So, here we are, almost a year after Now debuted with the launch of Jelly Bean, and the (mis)labeled Siri competitor has finally landed on Apple's mobile OS. Obviously, to truly come to grips with a product like this, you'd need days or weeks to truly judge it, but we're familiar enough with the Android version to feel comfortable passing along our initial impressions. So head on after the break to see whether or not Google was able to replicate its virtual assistant magic on iOS.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/29/google-now-for-ios-hands-on/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Sunday, April 28, 2013

PFT: SEC accounts for 63 picks ? a quarter of the draft

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Here are the terms of trades completed on Saturday, April 27, the third and final day of the 2013 NFL Draft. All draft choices are 2013 selections unless otherwise noted:

The Jaguars traded a fourth-round pick (No. 98) to the Eagles. In exchange, the Eagles sent fourth- and seventh-round picks (Nos. 101, 210) to Jacksonville. With pick No. 98, the Eagles selected Southern California quarterback Matt Barkley. Three picks later, the Jaguars selected South Carolina wide receiver Ace Sanders at No. 101. With pick No. 210, the Jaguars took Appalachian State cornerback Demetrius McCray.

The Buccaneers acquired a fourth-round pick (No. 100) from Oakland. The Raiders, in turn, received fourth- and sixth-round selections (Nos. 112, 181) from Tampa Bay. The Buccaneers took Illinois defensive tackle Akeem Spence at No. 100. The Raiders selected Arkansas quarterback Tyler Wilson at No. 112 and UCF running back Latavius Murray at No. 181.

The Giants traded for a fourth-round pick (No. 110) belonging to Arizona. In exchange, New York sent fourth- and sixth-round selections (Nos. 116, 187) to the Cardinals. The Giants took Syracuse quarterback Ryan Nassib at No. 110. With No. 116, the Cardinals took James Madison offensive guard Earl Watford, and with No. 187, they selected Clemson running back Andre Ellington.

The Steelers acquired a fourth-round pick from Cleveland (No. 111). In return, the Browns will get the Steelers? third-round pick in 2014. The Steelers selected Syracuse safety Shamarko Thomas at No. 111.

The Packers traded for Denver?s fourth-round pick (No. 125), giving the Broncos fifth- and sixth-round picks (Nos. 146, 173) in return. The Packers selected UCLA running back Jonathan Franklin at No. 125. At No. 146, the Broncos selected Western Kentucky defensive end Quanterus Smith. At No. 173, the Broncos took Virginia Tech offensive tackle Vinston Painter.

The Seahawks acquired the Lions? fifth-round selection (No. 137). In return, the Lions received fifth- and sixth-round choices (Nos. 165, 199) from Seattle. At No. 137, the Seahawks took Alabama defensive tackle Jesse Williams. The Lions took Appalachian State punter Sam Martin at No. 165 and Notre Dame running back Theo Riddick at No. 199.

The Colts acquired the Browns? fifth-round pick (No. 139) in exchange for Indianapolis? 2014 fourth-round pick. At No. 139, the Colts selected Tennessee-Martin defensive tackle Montori Hughes.

The Falcons acquired the Bears? fifth-round selection (No. 153), sending fifth- and seventh-round picks (Nos. 163, 236) to Chicago. The Falcons selected Texas Christian defensive end / outside linebacker Stansly Maponga. The Bears took Louisiana Tech tackle Jordan Mills at No. 163 and Washington State wide receiver Marquess Wilson at No. 236.

The Rams traded back into Round Five, sending sixth- and seventh-round picks (Nos. 184, 198) to the Texans for Houston?s fifth-round pick (No. 160). The Rams took Vanderbilt running back Zac Stacy at No. 160. The Texans exercised pick No. 198 on Bowling Green defensive tackle Chris Jones. The Texans dealt selection No. 184 to Oakland (see next entry).

The Texans acquired a sixth-round pick from Oakland (No. 176). In return, Houston sent sixth- and seventh-round selections to Oakland (Nos. 184, 233). The Texans selected San Jose State offensive tackle David Quessenberry at No. 176. The Raiders used selection No. 184 on Tennessee tight end Mychal Rivera and selection No. 233 on Missouri Western State defensive end David Bass.

The Buccaneers traded running back LeGarrette Blount to the Patriots for running back / kick returner Jeff Demps and a seventh-round pick (No. 229). The Buccaneers traded the No. 229 pick to Minnesota (see next entry).

The Buccaneers acquired a sixth-round pick from Minnesota (No. 189). In return, the Vikings received sixth- and seventh-round picks (Nos. 196, 229). The Buccaneers took Miami (Fla.) running back Mike James at No. 189. The Vikings selected UCLA offensive guard Jeff Baca at No. 196 and Florida State defensive tackle Everett Dawkins with pick No. 229.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/04/28/with-63-draft-picks-sec-produces-a-quarter-of-the-nfls-talent/related/

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Fire breaks out in Bangladesh building where 377 die

By Ruma Paul and Serajul Quadir

DHAKA (Reuters) - Fire broke out on Sunday in a garment factory that collapsed in the Bangladeshi capital, complicating attempts to find any survivors of a disaster that has killed 377 people.

Fire service officials said the blaze had been started by sparks from cutting equipment used by rescuers.

Police said the owner of the factory, Mohammed Sohel Rana,

was arrested on Sunday trying to flee to India, as hopes of finding more survivors from the country's worst industrial accident began to fade.

Rana was arrested by the elite Rapid Action Battalion in the border town of Benapole, Dhaka District Police Chief Habibur Rahman told Reuters, ending a four-day manhunt that began after Rana Plaza, which housed factories making low-cost garments for Western retailers, caved in on Wednesday.

Bangladesh television showed Rana, a local leader of the ruling Awami League's youth front, being flown by helicopter to the capital Dhaka, where he will face charges of faulty construction and causing unlawful death.

Authorities put the latest death toll at 377 and expect it to climb higher with hundreds more still unaccounted for.

Four people were pulled out alive on Sunday after almost 100 hours beneath the mound of broken concrete and metal, and rescuers were working frantically to try to save several others still trapped, fire services deputy director Mizanur Rahman said. One woman was pulled out of debris by rescuers but died, fire service officials said.

"The chances of finding people alive are dimming, so we have to step up our rescue operation to save any valuable life we can," said Major General Chowdhury Hassan Sohrawardi, coordinator of the operation at the site.

About 2,500 people have been rescued from the wrecked building in the commercial suburb of Savar, about 30 km (20 miles) from the capital, Dhaka.

Officials said the eight-storey complex had been built on spongy ground without the correct permits, and more than 3,000 workers - mainly young women - entered the building on Wednesday morning despite warnings that it was structurally unsafe.

A bank and shops in the same building closed after a jolt was felt and cracks were noticed on some pillars on Tuesday.

Police said one factory owner gave himself up on Sunday following the detention of two plant bosses and two engineers the day before.

Anger over the disaster has sparked days of protests and clashes, with police using tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets to quell demonstrators who set cars ablaze.

Garment workers blockaded a highway in a nearby industrial zone of Gazipur on Sunday demanding capital punishment for the owners.

The main opposition, joining forces with an alliance of leftist parties which is part of the ruling coalition, called for a national strike on May 2 in protest over the incident.

BUILT ON A FILLED-IN POND

Wednesday's collapse was the third major industrial incident in five months in Bangladesh, the second-largest exporter of garments in the world behind China. In November, a fire at the Tazreen Fashion factory in a suburb of Dhaka killed 112 people.

Such incidents have raised serious questions about worker safety and low wages, and could taint the reputation of the poor South Asian country, which relies on garments for 80 percent of its exports. The industry employs about 3.6 million people, most of them women, some of whom earn as little as $38 a month.

Emdadul Islam, chief engineer of the state-run Capital Development Authority (CDA), said on Friday that the owner of the building had not received the proper construction consent, obtaining a permit for a five-storey building from the local municipality, which did not have the authority to grant it.

Furthermore, three other storeys had been added illegally, he said. "Savar is not an industrial zone, and for that reason no factory can be housed in Rana Plaza," Islam told Reuters.

Islam said the building had been erected on the site of a pond filled in with sand and earth, weakening the foundations.

North American and European chains, including British retailer Primark and Canada's Loblaw, a unit of George Weston Ltd, said they were supplied by factories in the Rana Plaza building.

Since the disaster, the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) has asked factory owners to produce building designs by July in a bid to improve safety. (Writing by John Chalmers and Alex Richardson; Editing by Jeremy Laurence and Stephen Powell)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hope-survivors-fades-bangladesh-building-toll-reaches-363-082504472.html

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Argument preview: Legal advice as property : SCOTUSblog

At 10 a.m. tomorrow, the Supreme Court will hold one hour of oral argument on the novel issue of whether a lawyer?s legal advice can be treated as a kind of property that can be taken by extortion.? The argument time?in the case of Sekhar v. United States (docket 12-357) will be divided equally between the two sides.? Arguing for Massachusetts financier Giridhar Sekhar will be Paul D. Clement of the Washington law firm of Bancroft PLLC.? Representing the federal government will be Sarah E. Harrington, an Assistant to the U.S. Solicitor General.

Background

A lawyer?s advice ? depending on how good it turns out to be ? can be something of?value.? But is it property, the kind of property that would be involved when a hoodlum might say:??Your advice, or else??? That is the rather bizarre issue that the Supreme Court will now seek to settle in a case involving the Hobbs Act ? a federal law enacted in 1946 that makes it a crime to take someone else?s property by the use of a threat of force or violence.

The Hobbs Act is commonly used against mob figures who use threats as a way of doing their?criminal deeds.? In this case, however, the law was used against a Brookline, Mass., man, financier Giridhar Sekhar, when the government accused him of threatening to expose an alleged extra-marital affair if a lawyer for the state of New York did not give legal advice that could benefit Sekhar?s financial interests.

In a well-known decision?in 2003, Scheidler v. National Organization for Women?(a case about attempts to use the Hobbs Act against a plot to shut down abortion clinics), the Supreme Court appeared to have narrowed the scope of the Act, but that ruling was of no help to the Massachusetts financier.? He was convicted of one count of extortion and six counts of interstate transmission of threats of extortion, and was sentenced to fifteen months in prison on each count (with the sentences to be served concurrently).

The case focuses on the meaning of the word ?property? in the Hobbs Act: while legal advice is not physical property, is it a form of intangible property?? The facts of the case are more complex than the legal issue.

In New York State, there is an employee pension fund for state or local government workers ? the Common Retirement Fund.? The fund puts its assets into various investments, as decided by the state comptroller? A commitment to put money into?a particular investment signals that that opportunity has the backing of the fund, thus attracting other investors.

The comptroller had made a commitment in 2008 to put $35 million into a fund managed by a group named FA Technology Ventures, but that never matured into an actual investment.? In October 2009, the comptroller considered another potential $35 million investment in two funds operated by FA Tech, which potentially would give FA Tech management fees of nearly $8 million, and possibly more, over a ten-year period.

The general counsel of the Retirement Fund was considering whether to sign off on this new investment.? But the legal office learned that the state attorney general was investigating the placement agent that had advised FA Tech on the earlier potential investment, but not the one in 2009.? The general counsel wrote an internal memo advising against the new investment proposal.? The comptroller then chose not to make that deal.

FA Tech?s management heard rumors that the general counsel of the Retirement Fund was having an extra-marital affair.? The government would later charge one of the management partners ? Giridhar C. Sekhar ? with?writing e-mail messages to the general counsel, mentioning an ethical issue.

One of the messages accused the state legal officer of black-balling a recommendation of the Retirement Fund.? It threatened that,if the general counsel did not recommend going ahead on the second FA Tech investment, that the general counsel?s wife, the comptroller, the attorney general, and the press will be told that the general counsel was having an affair.

Made aware of the e-mails, the FBI traced them to Sekhar?s computer at his home in Brookline.? He admitted that he was the sender.?? He was then accused under the Hobbs Act of attempting to obtain by threats a favorable ruling by the general counsel on the FA Tech deal.?? Sekhar?s lawyers moved to have the charges dismissed, contending that a recommendation by a government staff lawyer paid by the state was not a form of property that could be sought by threats.

The judge rejected the challenge, concluding that a state lawyer?s legal advice was a form of intangible property under the Hobbs Act.? The judge ruled that federal prosecutors needed only to prove that Sekhar believed that the general counsel?s advice was the determining factor on whether the investment commitment would go ahead.?? He was convicted, and the judge threw out a post-verdict motion to wipe out the verdict, on the same property definition point.

The case went to the Second Circuit Court, and it agreed that the general counsel?s advice was property under the Hobbs Act.? A state staff lawyer, the Circuit Court declared, had the right to make legal recommendations without being subjected to threats to influence them.?? Making recommendations, the decision said, is the way lawyers make their living.

Sekhar?s lawyers took the case on to the Supreme Court last September.

Petition for certiorari

The Sekhar petition raised the single legal issue of whether a recommendation by a salaried state attorney in?a single instance is ?intangible property that can be the subject of an extortion attempt? under the Hobbs Act.

The petition argued that the Second Circuit ruling had ?radically? changed the meaning of??property? in three ways that were wrong: by treating the right of an official to make a recommendation as property of that official, by turning virtually any attempt at coercion into extortion when all that was involved was a lawyer?s legal advice, and by holding that the prosecution need not show that the property involved has any value to that lawyer.

Sekhar?s lawyers contended that the Second Circuit ruling conflicted with the Justices? 2003 decision in the Scheidler case, arguing that the Court had narrowed the concept of property under the Hobbs Act to something of value that a person can exercise, transfer, or sell, including tangible assets that are subject to an individual?s control.

The Justice Department urged the Court not to grant review, asserting that the Second Circuit got the issue right, and that there was no conflict among the federal appeals courts on that question.?? On the correctness of the decision below, the Department argued that the concept of property ?includes not only the tangible and intangible assets of a business, but also the control over those assets.??? That includes, the brief in opposition said, control of a business in any legitimate manner.

A lawyer?s advice, according to the government, is something that an attorney sells to a client and thus it amounts to intangible property subject to extortion.

The government also contended that the Second Circuit did not contradict the Justices? Scheidler decision, because that ruling turned on the meaning of the word ?obtain? in the Hobbs Act, not the word ?property.?

Briefs on the merits

Giridhar Sekhar?s brief on the merits asked the Court to look closely as to what had actually been done when the Retirement Fund?s general counsel made a legal recommendation.?? It is?not something that has been transferred to anyone else, and certainly was not transferred to Sekhar.? Once delivered, a piece of legal?advice does not become property of someone else, the brief added.

What the general counsel did, in his official state-paid duties, according to the brief, was to make routine, case-by-case recommendations as part of an internal government decision-making process.? If, as the Supreme Court has held, a license not yet? issued by a government agency?and its issuance by the agency do not make it property, then internal legal advice cannot become property, Sekhar contended.

If the general counsel had retracted his earlier advice to veto the proposed investment and had made a recommendation more favorable to FA Tech?s interest, the brief said, that did not create property that could be acquired.

What the Second Circuit did in trying to salvage the guilty verdict, Sekhar argued, was to come up with the theory that the ?property? at issue was the general counsel?s right to give legal advice without being subjected to threats.?? That ?right? is no more property than the recommendation itself, his brief asserted.

What the Court did in the Scheidler opinion, the brief said, was to use common sense.? And the Scheidler limitation of the Hobbs Act, the document added, reflected the congressional judgment to make it a federal crime to engage in extortion, but not to engage in mere ?coercion.?

Finally, Sekhar?s lawyers argued that the ?rule of lenity? and the need to avoid ?federalizing? many crimes counseled against extending the definition of extortion to include legal advice by a paid government attorney.?? If what Sekhar did constituted extortion under federal law, and not mere coercion, that would bring many forms of ?social protest and labor activism? under the Hobbs Act, the brief said.

The federal government?s merits brief argued that the Hobbs Act extends to ?intangible rights with economic value,? noting that the federal law was modeled on New York State?s extortion law.? That state law had been interpreted, as long ago as 1892, to mean that it covered property beyond ?tangible articles alone,? according to the brief.?? State courts had read that law to include ?the right to run a business and the right to labor.??? Congress passed the Hobbs Act against that broad background, the brief argued.

When one interferes with someone else?s ?right to pursue one?s existing business or occupation free from improper interference,? that constitutes a violation of the basic principles of the Hobbs Act, the government asserted.? ?The right to work in order to earn a living is among the most important intangible rights protected as property, as a variety of sources of law recognize,? the brief said.

When Congress enacted the Hobbs Act, it did so, the Department?s lawyers contended, to fight racketeering and the habit of racketeers of using extortion to take control of legitimate businesses and labor unions.? That aim would be frustrated if Sekhar?s view of the Hobbs Act were to prevail, the document said.

On the details of what the Retirement Fund?s general counsel was doing in this case, the government brief said the state lawyer was giving substantive legal advice to the comptroller and that what Sekhar attempted to do was to take control of the general counsel?s advice and turn it to his own property.

The government argued that interpreting the Hobbs Act to reach what Sekhar did would not intrude upon states? interests in enforcing their own laws.? Congress passed the law knowing that it would reach conduct that states already made crimes under their own laws, and it enacted the law under its extensive Commerce Clause powers, the document said.

Finally, the government?s lawyers argued that ?the rule of lenity? ?has no role to play in this case,? because that is ?a tie-breaking rule? that helps resolve competing interpretations of a criminal law when they are in balance.? The meaning of ?property? under extortion principles is clear, and thus there is no balance to strike.

Sekhar?s side in the case is supported by the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and by the Cato Institute, a libertarian advocacy organization.? Their amicus brief contended that Sekhar?s case illustrated ?a recurring pattern in federal criminal law,? with Congress passed a law directed at a specific problem, federal prosecutors seek to enlarge its meaning to other problems they perceive, some courts accept those expanding arguments, and then the Supreme Court ?steps in to return the statute to the limits that the text and principles of statutory interpretation require.?

That brief echoed Sekhar?s expressions of concern about the impact on federalism principles, and on the need to apply the ?rule of lenity? to a criminal statute.

Analysis

If the Supreme Court were to view this case as confined to the Hobbs Act, it might well be easier for the federal government to win.? It is unusual to think of legal advice as ?property,? but it is not too hard to think of it as having economic value, and that puts an extort to steer it by threats closer to the concept of extortion.

But an expansive definition of??property? in this case, embracing the right to run a business and the right to make a living, probably could not be confined to Hobbs Act jurisprudence.? It could set the stage for many other assertions of rights that are insulated from interference by government regulation or control.? This is a Supreme Court that is not particularly fond of reading federal laws to create original new forms of ?rights.?

The government, then, has to depend quite heavily upon the Court examining the Hobbs Act, and its New York antecedent state law, and finding there an expansive notion of?how to define intangible property that can be confined to the extortion context.

Giridhar Sekhar?s appeal, aside from relying upon a claim that treating legal advice as either a form of ?property? or as a form of a ?property right? as absurd, probably made its strongest points in arguing that a criminal statute should not be extended out to novel reach without Congress having contemplated that specifically, and in arguing against ?federalization? of the crime of coercion.

What may well work against Sekhar, though, are the facts of the case of what he was accused of doing: using a threat of damaging publicity and damaging reports to a lawyer?s superiors in order to get a policy decision turned around so that he and his firm could pocket?millions in management fees.??That was hardly a form of petitioning government for a redress of grievances, so much as it has the aroma of?pure manipulation for economic gain.?? His lawyers need to find ways to keep the Justices thinking about legal arguments and not focus too heavily upon the prosecution?s evidence.

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Posted in Sekhar v. U.S., Analysis, Featured, Merits Cases

Recommended Citation: Lyle Denniston, Argument preview: Legal advice as property, SCOTUSblog (Apr. 22, 2013, 7:02 PM), http://www.scotusblog.com/2013/04/argument-preview-legal-advice-as-property/

Source: http://www.scotusblog.com/2013/04/argument-preview-legal-advice-as-property/

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Oops! N.Y.'s Suffolk County accidentally defaults on debt

By Edward Krudy and Pamela Niimi

NEW YORK (Reuters) - As if Suffolk County, home of the Hamptons and playground of the rich and famous on New York's Long Island, didn't have enough financial problems already.

A regulatory filing on behalf of the county dated April 16 shows it accidentally missed an interest payment on some of its debt, including $76.1 million of public improvement bonds, putting the county technically in default. Oops.

The county is wealthy with income per capita well above the national average but it has run into difficulty recently, declaring a fiscal emergency last year after an independent task force predicted a three-year deficit of $530 million.

The county could have a budget shortfall of as much as $250 million by the end of next year, local officials said last month.

The error is more of an embarrassing glitch than anything else. The missed payment - just $722.65 - would be small change for many of the county's residents.

That will buy you fewer than 20 butter-poached lobster rolls (not the most expensive thing on the menu) at Dave's Grill in Montauk, a quaint fishing village on the island's northern tip, or just 10 bottles of Merry Edwards Sauvignon Blanc Russian River 2009 at La Plage in Wading River. A mere picnic.

The mistake was pointed out by the Depository Trust Company, a clearing firm, the day after it was missed and the filing says the error was the fault of the county's escrow agent, M&T Bank.

"The county informed M&T of its error and the escrow agent immediately wired the $722.65 payment to DTC," the regulatory filing said.

So what went wrong? The county was making the first payment in a complicated arrangement that uses $17 million in state HEAL grants for medical costs, primarily related to the Foley Nursing home, said Richard Tortora, president of Capital Markets Advisors, the county's financial adviser.

The $722.65, part of a debt payment of over $1 million, was the portion of the payment from the HEAL grants. The $17 million is being held in an escrow account at M&T.

"M&T for reasons we can't fathom just blew it: 'Oops it wasn't in our system, we missed it'", said Tortora, president of Capital Markets Advisors. Tortora said missing the payment and having to make a regulatory filing with the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board was frustrating after months spent putting the arrangement together for the county.

M&T Bank was not immediately available for comment.

Fitch Ratings, the credit ratings agency, downgraded Suffolk County's general obligation bond rating to A from A-plus last month, affecting about $1.4 billion of debt. General obligation bonds have the full faith and credit of the issuer and are the best gauge of how risky investors think the county is.

Fitch said it had concerns about the county's ability to become financially stable, let alone reduce its big deficit.

(This story was corrected to fix name of Suffolk County's financial advisers)

(Reporting by Edward Krudy, additional reporting by Pam Niimi; Editing by Kenneth Barry)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/oops-yorks-suffolk-county-accidentally-defaults-debt-173732971--sector.html

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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

How would you change Nintendo's 3DS XL?

Nintendo 3DS XL review Bigger is better, but not quite enough

The Nintendo 3DS XL improved on the original in a wide variety of ways, including better ergonomics and playability. The chunkier body and bigger screen was key in helping to coax the console out of the shadow of its predecessor, and we were full of praise when we reviewed it. But the experience of living with a device is so different from reviewing it, that we'd like to ask you what, if Nintendo was asking, would you have changed?

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SportsOneSource.com - Sporting Goods Business UPDATE



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OIA VantagePoint: Outdoor Apparel Sales Remained Strong Through March
SportsOneSource Media???? Posted: 4/22/2013

Outdoor Product sales showed solid growth in fiscal March, up 7.6 percent to $881.4 million, according to the latest monthly sales report from OIA VantagePoint. The growth was driven primarily by strong sales in Outdoor Apparel, along with the Outdoor Footwear category, which grew for the first time this year. Hardgoods sales were up again over last year, but not to the levels seen in January and February. The strongest channel growth was in the National Accounts Internet and Discount/Mass trade channels.

Outdoor Apparel sales increased 16.6 percent to $243.3 million for the five-week period ended April 6, 2013. Although Apparel sales growth fell short of levels seen in the first two months of 2013 (increases between 19 and 30 percent) retailers continued to benefit from cooler weather, which drove the sale of Outerwear Tops later into the spring than last year. Headwear, Handwear and Undergarments all increased by 25 percent or more as retailers took advantage of late snows to clear out inventories.

Following decreases in January and February, Outdoor Footwear sales moved in a positive direction in fiscal March, up 4.3 percent from March 2012 to $239.6 million. Comfort Casual showed the strongest growth among all Outdoor Footwear (up 23 percent), but Sandals and Barefoot/Natural Running continued to hold back the footwear category.

Sales of Outdoor Hardgoods slowed following double-digit growth during the first two months of this year, up 4.6 percent to $398.5 in March. Showing strength over last year were Hydration, Technical Packs and Bags, Bicycles/Cycling Products and Climbing/Mountaineering Equipment, which all posted double-digit gains versus the five-week comparable month last year.

Sales through the National Accounts Internet channel continued to gain strength, accounting for 9.8 percent of all Outdoor Product sales in March, up from 7.8 percent in March 2012. This trend is particularly evident in Outdoor Apparel, where National Accounts Internet made up 14.3 percent of sales in March, up from 9.2 percent last year.

Final results for the month are published in the OIA VantagePoint monthly trend report, available free of charge to Outdoor Industry Association (OIA) members. For information about joining OIA, visit outdoorindustry.org/membership or call Ingrid Malmberg and the OIA membership team at 303.444.3353.

OIA VantagePoint is the first and only full market point-of-sale data platform built specifically for the outdoor industry. OIA VantagePoint monthly trend reports provide the broadest and most timely view of outdoor product sales available. Category reports are available at no charge to Outdoor Industry Association members and provide comprehensive visibility into the outdoor marketplace by tracking weekly point-of-sale data from more than 10,000 retail doors and websites that carry outdoor products, including nearly 450 outdoor specialty locations. It is the broadest view of both brick-and-mortar and Internet sales of outdoor products available in the market. In-depth sales information is available online within four days of the prior-week close a competitive advantage for businesses who can shift critical resources and react quickly to ever-changing consumer preferences.

For more information, visit outdoorindustry.org/vantagepoint.

Outdoor Industry Association
Based in Boulder, Colo., with offices in Washington, D.C., Outdoor Industry Association is the leading trade association for the outdoor industry and the title sponsor of Outdoor Retailer. OIA supports the growth and success of more than 4,000 manufacturers, distributors, suppliers, sales representatives and retailers of outdoor recreation apparel, footwear, equipment and services. For more information, go to outdoorindustry.org or call 303.444.3353.

The SportsOneSource Group
The SportsOneSource Group is a full service market research company delivering solutions through consumer insight research, retail insight research and retail point-of-sale trending and analysis. The company provides the most reliable, timely and comprehensive sports and outdoor industry information available in the market today. SportScanInfo is a SportsOneSource technology platform developed to compile, aggregate and disseminate aggregated retail point-of-sale information. SportsOneSource also publishes the Sports Executive Weekly and The B.O.S.S. Report executive newsletters, along with the SGB and SGB Performance print publications and their related online, email and digital products. For more information about The SportsOneSource Group call 303.987.3450 or go to SportsOneSource.com.

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Sunday, April 21, 2013

North Korea reiterates it will not give up nuclear arms

SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea reiterated on Saturday that it would not give up its nuclear weapons, rejecting a U.S. condition for talks although it said it was willing to discuss disarmament.

North Korea, in a sign of a possible end to weeks of heightened hostility on the Korean peninsula, offered the United States and South Korea a list of conditions on Thursday for talks, including the lifting of U.N. sanctions.

But the United States said it was awaiting "clear signals" that North Korea would halt its nuclear weapons activities.

"The U.S. should not think about the denuclearization on the peninsula before the world is denuclearized," the North's state-run Rodong Sinmun newspaper said in a commentary.

"There may be talks between the DPRK and the U.S. for disarmament but no talks on denuclearization," it said. North Korea's official name is the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK).

North Korea signed a denuclearization-for-aid deal in 2005 but later backed out of that pact. It now says its nuclear arms are a "treasured sword" that it will never give up.

It conducted its third nuclear test in February.

The test triggered new U.N. sanctions which in turn led to a dramatic intensification of North Korea's threats of nuclear strikes against South Korea and the United States.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry visited China, South Korea and Japan this month for talks on North Korea and stressed his interest in a diplomatic solution to the tension on the peninsula.

He later told a U.S. Senate hearing that North Korea's list of conditions was "at least a beginning gambit", but added that it was "not acceptable, obviously, and we have to go further".

The Rodong Sinmun said U.S. talk of dialogue was "nothing but rhetoric".

North Korea has a long record of making threats to secure concessions from the United States and South Korea, only to repeat the process later. Both the United States and the South have said in recent days that the cycle must cease.

(Reporting by Robert Birsel; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/north-korea-reiterates-not-nuclear-arms-083235804.html

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The hellish week that traumatized -- and bonded -- Americans

Charles Krupa / AP

A woman carries a girl from their home as a SWAT team searching for a suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings enters the building in Watertown, Mass., Friday, That was part of what turned out to be a chaotic week in the U.S.

By Bill Briggs and JoNel Aleccia, NBC News

Americans found their resilience pushed to the limit? this week ? and they still don?t know what?s coming next.

When the Boston Police Department tweeted "CAPTURED!!!" Friday night, signaling the apprehension?of the second suspect in the bombing blasts that devastated that city's famous marathon, their?elation was echoed by people?across the nation who clapped, cheered, pinged, Facebooked and tweeted their own relief that, finally, there was an end to?the manhunt -- and a?hellish span of days.

Even though that siege has passed, the impact of collective crisis fatigue may well linger, experts say.

The U.S. already had endured Monday?s deadly attack, Tuesday?s poison letters?and the Wednesday Texas fertilizer plant explosion that has left a still-untold number of people dead, 60 missing and 200 injured. Thursday and Friday saw a late-night shootout and a day-long lockdown that resulted in the death of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, and the capture of his 19-year-old brother, Dzhokhar.?

?All in all, this has been a tough week,? said President Barack Obama, addressing the nation Friday night. ?But we?ve seen the character of our country once more.?

Through its long history, America has weathered its share of the disturbing and the traumatic -- political assassinations, civil and international wars, school massacres, Pearl Harbor, the 9/11 attacks. But few in this generation can cite a single Monday-through-Friday series so jam-packed with frightful, breaking-news bulletins.

?For the first time in a long time, we?re really being challenged now on our home turf," ?said Marleen Wong, a professor and associate dean of the University of Southern California school of social work. She compared the condensed spate of sadness to the 1960s assassinations of President John Kennedy, his brother Robert, and Martin Luther King, though she admits those murders spanned five years.

Sure, it's a lot to take. But when do we hit our bad-news breaking point??

"If there?s another IED in another city, then we?re really going to have a problem. That?s what concerns me. We might then be crossing some kind of new line," said?Bart Rossi, a New Jersey psychologist and author of "The New-New American Life Style: Post September 11, 2001, A Psychologist?s Perspective." "We're talking about some heavy issues here."?

Already, he expects that many Americans are purposely avoiding crowds and staying home, fearful that another mass-casualty is looming. He estimates that in about one month, those same people will resume their normal routines ? if all remains relatively quiet.

"If you put a number on our national anxiety it's a 6 or 7 or maybe trending toward an 8," Rossi said. "We?re so frustrated and angry. If something else happens, it might go up to a 9 or a 10, where we?re all just really overwhelmed and overwrought."

That?s true even though the actual risk of harm is very small, even for those who were confined in the immediate area of Watertown, Mass., where Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was believed to be trapped for most of Friday.

?The risk is statistically infinitesimal,? said David Ropeik, a Harvard University instructor, author and consultant in risk communication. ?And greater emotionally.?

Terrorism is effective precisely because of the emotions it evokes and the stress that triggers a flight-or-fight response that suppresses reason and makes people more instinctive, Ropeik said.

?What terrorism is, is random, violent madness that makes us all feel vulnerable,? he said. ?The unpredictable, unpreventable, could-happen-to-anyone-anywhere-anytime, they-are-living-among-us crimes always scare us.?

And it's not like Americans have been dancing lately through a landscape of easy years. The nation has?weathered two wars ? one still active ? and the nasty aftermath of those conflicts, a bad economy, and an adversarial political environment: not traumatic for most yet exhausting and grinding for many. Since last summer, we've mourned dozens lost in the Aurora theater massacre, Superstorm Sandy and the Newtown school slaughter.

"These are times that really reinforce our values and the things we hold dear: the ability to live in peace," Wong said.?

"But on the other hand, I hear messages not just from leaders but also from people, from athletic teams, from runners ? from people who have expressed the idea that you can try to hurt Americans, but we?re not afraid, we?re going to respond, we?re going to keep going, we?re going to prevail.

"It really demonstrates the courage of Americans in a way that reminds me of Britain during World War II when the bombs were falling every day in London and their leader, Winston Churchill, stood up and described what the English spirit is all about," Wong said. In similar fashion, some have demonstrated?heroic?and?defiant?actions this week ? like the Boston hockey crowd belting out the?National Anthem?on Wednesday night.

"I saw that. It was so wonderful. It made me cry," Wong said. "We will be together, and we?ll get through it."

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Japan PM Abe's war shrine offering likely to infuriate China

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe made a ritual offering of a pine tree to a shrine seen as a symbol of Japan's former militarism on Sunday, a gesture likely to upset Asian victims of Japan's war-time aggression, including China and South Korea.

Abe, an outspoken nationalist, offered the tree to the Yasukuni Shrine, where 14 Japanese leaders convicted as war criminals by an Allied tribunal are honored along with other war dead. Abe did not visit the shrine.

Abe, who became prime minister for a second time after his Liberal Democratic Party's (LDP) election win in December, is unlikely to visit the shrine as he seeks to rebuild relationships with China and South Korea.

Sino-Japanese relations deteriorated sharply in September after Japan bought islets in the East China Sea claimed by Beijing, sparking anti-Japanese protests across China.

Ties have been shadowed for years by what Beijing says has been Tokyo's refusal to admit to wartime atrocities committed by Japanese soldiers in the country between 1931 and 1945. Memories of brutal Japanese occupation also run deep in North and South Korea.

Two Japanese ministers and deputy chief cabinet secretary visited the shrine this weekend, as did Abe as main opposition party leader in October.

"It is natural for a lawmaker to offer condolences for the spirits of those who gave their lives for the country," said Keiji Furuya, minister in charge of the issue of North Korea's abductions of Japanese nationals, who visited on Sunday, as did Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato.

Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications Yoshitaka Shindo visited on Saturday.

(Reporting by Kaori Kaneko)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/japan-pm-abes-war-shrine-offering-likely-infuriate-065500427.html

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Monday, April 15, 2013

Kobo unveils limited edition Aura HD e-reader: 6.8-inch HD screen, ships April 25th for $169 (hands-on)

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Late last year, Kobo went small. The introduction of the 5-inch Mini was no doubt, at least in part, an attempt to offer up a bit of variety in a space whose parameters are largely defined by two Goliaths: Amazon and Barnes & Noble. The device offered a compelling alternative, but ultimately not one enticing enough to recommend it. Announced at roughly the same time, the company's first take at front-lighting technology, the Glo, suffered a similar fate, coming on the heels of the Kindle Paperwhite and Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight.

Less than half a year later, the company has announced a new reader that once again rethinks the standard 6-inch screen. With the Aura HD, Kobo is going big, extending things to 6.8 inches, putting it closer to tablet size. With that upgrade comes an impressive resolution: 1,440 x 1,080 (compared to the 1,024 x 768 on the Paperwhite and 1,024 by 758 on the Glo). It's a product focused on hardcore readers. "We got 10,000 customers together across dozens of countries to ask them what we can do for them," Kobo CEO Michael Serbinis explained. As such, it's a limited edition offering, one not destined to replace the flagship Glo. "This is something that is designed for this most passionate, voracious reader," he said, "and as much as I wish everyone was like that -- it would make us a lot bigger business right away -- that is not the case." The reader's priced at $169, and is available for pre-order now, with shipping expected to begin on the 25th. In the meantime, we've got more details and some hands-on photos after the break.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/15/kobo-limited-edition-aura-hd-e-reader/

9-11

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

As Obama presses Congress on gun controls, McConnell says he'd join GOP filibuster

President Obama renewed his plea for gun control Monday on the heels of a "60 Minutes" interview featuring the families of Newtown. ?NBC's Chuck Todd reports.

By Kasie Hunt, Political Reporter, NBC News

With the families of children killed in last year?s Newtown school shooting looking on, President Barack Obama on Monday made an emotional plea for Americans to urge Congress to pass new gun control measures.

"We all have to stand up," Obama said in a speech in Hartford, Conn., where he flew to try and maintain faltering momentum for a package of new gun laws the Senate could take up this week.?"If you want the people you send to Washington to have just an iota of courage that the educators at Sandy Hook showed when danger arrived on their doorstep, then we'll all have to stand up."

As Obama was speaking -- and the crowd was chanting, "we want a vote" -- the Senate's top Republican announced he would join a GOP filibuster of gun control legislation and oppose allowing a Democratic gun control bill to come to the Senate floor for debate

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell did leave the door open to allowing a gun control compromise bill to come to the floor, but his office said in a statement that he will oppose the version of the legislation that Reid outlined before the Senate's just-concluded two week recess.

Eleven parents and spouses of Newtown victims were set to board Air Force One to fly to Washington after the speech, where they'll spend three days lobbying Congress to pass the new gun safety laws.

The Senate is poised to start debating and voting on gun laws as early as this week.

But after weeks of negotiations, the gun bill is a much less ambitious proposal than what Obama and Vice President Joe Biden first pushed for in the days after Newtown, where 20 schoolchildren and 6 adults were killed.

Legislation proposed in the wake of the shooting included a renewal of a lapsed assault weapons ban and measures to limit high capacity magazines. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has pledged that the upper chamber will vote on those measures, but both are likely doomed to fail.

Now, lawmakers are fighting over expanding background checks to cover most gun sales. Under current law, Americans can buy firearms at a gun show or online without getting a background check.

"We have to tell Congress its time to require a background check for anyone who wants to buy a gun so people who are dangerous to themselves and others cannot get their hands on a gun," Obama said Monday.

Senators are still negotiating a compromise proposal on background checks, and Republican Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania is in talks with Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia to try and find a bipartisan agreement.

But with the upper chamber set to begin debating gun control soon, they're running out of time.

This story was originally published on

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