Sunday, April 10, 2011

BBC IN GRAND NATIONAL ‘COVER-UP’: TWO HORSES LIE DEAD... BUT FURY AS TV COMMENTATOR JUST CALLS THEM ‘OBSTACLES’

By Ian Gallagher
Last updated at 3:46 AM on 10th April 2011

Two horses died during yesterday’s Grand National in one of the most ‘distressing’ races in recent history.

Millions of TV viewers saw Ornais fall at the fourth fence, breaking his neck, while Dooneys Gate broke his back minutes later at Becher’s Brook.
It meant that for the first time in the race’s history the two fences were bypassed during the second circuit of the Aintree track – as the horses were hastily screened off with tarpaulins.

But the BBC was accused of a ‘cover-up’ after commentator Mick Fitzgerald described the dead horses as ‘obstacles’.

Distressing sight: Runners and riders lie in a tangle on the ground after jumping the notorious Becher's Brook where Dooneys Gate died today

Distressing sight: Runners and riders lie in a tangle on the ground after jumping the notorious Becher's Brook where Dooneys Gate died today

The former Grand National winner made the remark while discussing how chequered flags were waved as jockeys approached the 20th and 22nd fences, which they were required to bypass because the dead bodies had not been removed.

Mr Fitzgerald said: ‘The thing is, you know there is an obstacle ahead, that’s what these chequered flags tell you.’

One viewer wrote on the corporation’s own website: ‘I’m amazed that the BBC coverage pans over the tarpaulins on the re-run and the commentators just talk about “obstacles”.’

Another said: ‘And the BBC – shame on you. No mention of what’s happened, even when there’s 2 dead covered horses on screen.’
On The Mail on Sunday website, commenters also expressed outrage. ‘Jax’ branded the race ‘disgusting and cruel’, adding: ‘It’s not the Grand National, it’s a national disgrace.’

Covered up: A dead horse is hidden by tarpaulin as the race continues over on the far side of the Aintree course

Covered up: A dead horse is hidden by tarpaulin as the race continues over on the far side of the Aintree course

Another, ‘Phoenix’, said: ‘I cannot believe in this day and age that this kind of public cruelty still goes on. Two animals died today but nobody cares, we’ll do it all again next year.’

John Ledbury wrote: ‘It’s appalling that two horses died for our amusement. This jump should be banned.’

Andrew Tyler of Animal Aid described the gruelling four-and-a-half-mile marathon as one of the most ‘distressing’ races he could recall and echoed criticisms of the BBC, saying: ‘It is particularly ¬callous and disgusting that a member of the commentary team should describe the dead horses as they lay on the course as an “obstacle”.’

Aintree said the bypassing practice became possible two years ago for the first time as part of ‘ongoing safety improvements’. More than half the 40 runners failed to make the finish line.

Tragedy: Dooneys Gate, in the centre of the picture one of the race's two fatalities ridden by Paul Mullins, falls at Becher's Brook

Tragedy: Dooneys Gate, in the centre of the picture one of the race's two fatalities ridden by Paul Mullins, falls at Becher's Brook

Over: Grand Slam Hero and Aidan Coleman at the 13th fence. Just 19 of the field of 40 finished the race

Over: Grand Slam Hero and Aidan Coleman at the 13th fence. Just 19 of the field of 40 finished the race

Tony Moore, chairman of Fight Against Animal Cruelty in Europe, led a group of around 40 people demonstrating outside the racecourse. He said: ‘If they really care about horses, why do the owners, jockeys and trainers put them through this ordeal?’

On average, three horses a year are fatally injured over the three-day Aintree meeting. Ornais, ridden by Nick Scholfield, came to grief at the fourth fence.The nine-year-old was one of four horses in the race trained by Paul Nicholls, who said: ‘He was a very good novice chaser in his early days. It is bad luck and very sad to lose a horse in this way.’

Dooneys Gate came down two fences later at Becher’s Brook. Irish trainer Willie Mullins, whose son Patrick was having his first National ride on the horse, said: ‘He was a good servant to us. It’s very unfortunate and Patrick is devastated.’

Unseated: Mark Walsh and Quolibet come to grief

Going ...Mark Walsh and Quolibet

Unseated: Mark Walsh and Quolibet come to grief

Going ... The rider knows he's in deep trouble

Unseated: Mark Walsh and Quolibet come to grief

Gone ... The pair crash to the ground at the 11th

Viewers could clearly see the dead horses being covered with tarpaulins from an aerial camera. The BBC’s Grand National presenter Clare Balding later tweeted: ‘Very sorry to report two fatalities at the Grand National – thoughts with all those connected with Ornais & Dooneys Gate.’

Julian Thick, managing director of Aintree Racecourse, said: ‘We are desperately sad at the accidents and our thoughts go out to the connections of Ornais and Dooneys Gate. When a horse gets hurt, everyone is deeply upset. Safety is the first priority for the organisers of the Grand National meeting and we will redouble our efforts to make sure that everyone involved in the event is able to participate in safety and comfort. Horseracing is a carefully regulated and monitored sport. All horses and riders in the Grand National have to meet very high standards set by an independent panel of experts.’

Responding to Animal Aid’s criticism, a BBC spokesman said: ‘We were aware of the unfortunate events of the two fatalities. During the race and the re-run this was covered with as much sensitivity as possible.

‘Clare [Balding] was also most sensitive in her reporting of the incidents and even touched on it in her closing links to the programme.’

Watched by 600 million people worldwide, the race was won by Ballabriggs, which finished ahead of Oscar Time ridden by Kate Middleton’s friend Sam Waley-Cohen.

Bookmakers William Hill said more than £250 million was gambled yesterday.


33 tragedies at course in just 11 years

By JO MACFARLANE

In all 33 horses have died during three-day Grand National meetings at Aintree since 2000 – and it is unusual for no horse to be killed as a result of the main race itself.

In 2000 five horses died over the three days. The high death toll prompted animal rights activists to describe it as a ‘blood bath’ and call for an investigation.

Strong Promise, Rossell Island and Architect all suffered fatal falls on the first day of the meeting while Lake Kariba had a heart attack at the end of a race. Toni’s Tip sustained fatal spinal injuries during a race the following day.

Close up: Horses attempting the notoriously difficult Becher's Brook at the Grand National

Close up: Horses attempting the notoriously difficult Becher's Brook at the Grand National

In 2001, The Outback Way also died from spinal injuries. Of the four deaths in 2002, two – The Last Fling and Manx Magic – happened during the Grand National race itself. Desert Mountain and Anubis Quercus died in earlier races at the meeting.

Goguenard had to be put down after the 2003 Grand National and Coolnagorna was also put down after breaking a hind leg. Unusually, there were no deaths in 2004.

But Lilium de Cotte died after suffering a haemorrhage on the middle day of the 2005 meeting, and two horses – Terivic and Tyneandthyneagain – were killed in 2006. Tyneandthyneagain perished after falling at the first fence in the main race.

The 2007 meeting saw the deaths of three horses.

Lord Rodney and Into The Shadows were killed in races before the main event.

Falling: Riders and horses fall in the melee at Becher's Brook

Falling: Riders and horses fall in the melee at Becher's Brook

Several horses fall at Becher's Brook
Several horses fall at Becher's Brook

Dramatic: Several horses fall at Becher's, captured here in dramatic close up

Meanwhile, Graphic Approach died a month after sustaining injuries at the notorious Becher’s Brook fence during the Grand National.

Another three horses were killed in 2008: Time To Sell, The High Grass and McKelvey. McKelvey had become something of a star after featuring on BBC1’s The One Show as he was treated for a tendon injury and prepared for the iconic race.

But 2009 was an even worse year, with five deaths – the worst toll since 2000.

Hear The Echo collapsed and died at the end of the big race on the Saturday, while Exotic Dancer, Mel In Blue, Moscow Catch and Lilla Sophia died earlier during the meeting.

A further four died last year, 2010, although none of them during the main Grand National race. Pagan Starprincess, Prudent Honour, Plaisir D’Estraval and Schindlers Hunt all fell during previous races.

This year, one of the bloodiest for the Grand National itself, two horses, Ornais and Dooneys Gate, died during the main race. Inventor fell on Thursday.

Animal Aid claims 162 horses have died on race courses in Britain over the past 12 months.

The organisation’s website carries a feature called Race Horse Death Watch, which keeps a running record of racing tragedies up and down the country.

And they're off! The horses make their way down to the first fence in the John Smith's Grand National

And they're off! The horses make their way down to the first fence in the John Smith's Grand National

On his way: Ballabriggs ridden by Jason Maguire in green and yellow silks leaps over the water jump on his way to winning the Grand National

On his way: Ballabriggs ridden by Jason Maguire in green and yellow silks leaps over the water jump on his way to winning the Grand National

Winner: Jockey Jason Maguire celebrating after romping home by two and a quarter lengths on Ballabriggs

Winner: Jockey Jason Maguire celebrating after romping home by two and a quarter lengths on Ballabriggs


Saturday, April 9, 2011

CENSORED BY FACEBOOK FOR TRYING TO POST LINKS TO MY OWN ESAYS

Copyright 2011-3011 Alternative News Forum, All Rights Reserved.

ALERT: I am trying to post this essay and each time I attempt to publish all the identifying tags fall out of it. This has NEVER happened before on WordPress. Here are some of the tags I applied to this post, just in case you are wondering why such a thing might happen:

Obama White House spying on WordPress bloggers

American civil liberties freedom of speech

NSA, CIA, NCS, Obama White House surveillance

internet Freedom of speech in peril

Freedom of speech in America in peril

Facebook and the death of privacy

privacy

civil liberties

Something is up with Facebook. It’s not legal, and it IS NOT OK. First, I would like to state that I am not particularly a fan of the social networking and secret surveillance service, and I have posted numerous essays outing the CIA seed money and NCS roots of Facebook since 2008.

Alternative News Forum keeps a presence on FB, which I use to announce new posts, articles and essays which appear on this news blog. Today something happened which is flat-out illegal and should never be allowed to take place on a so called “free” social networking site. Keep in mind that the supposed reason that FB was founded in the first place was to assist like minded individuals and groups to find one another and socialize online. Right?

Wrong! Facebook has pretended this was the reason they were founded. The real reason FB was founded was to babysit America and keep an eye on what people are saying, thinking, and doing.And if what Americans are saying, thinking and doing on FB displeases the site, they will be blocked – which is just a geeky way of saying “censored” on FB.

How do I know This? The final proof is what happened today 4.8.11 when I tried to post a simple description and URL to one of my most recent essays.

Below is a simple screen shot of the description I typed and the URL of the essay:

Plain and simple truth telling, right?

Here’s what happened when I tried to post it. Keep in mind I log into FB about twice a week for about 6 minutes, maintain my presence, then log off. I never spend more than 4 minutes on the site, and the only thing I use my page for is the announcing of new posts and articles on this blog. I have never once spammed FB, although I have been spammed by it repeatedly. This happens when someone I do not know, a “friend of a friend” on FB subscribes me to a group, then hammers my email account with messages from that group.

I have repeatedly opened my email and found 50 or 60 messages at a time, every one of them unsolicited, from these FB groups. I have to tediously go to the site, reset my settings, unsub from the group that I never subbed to in the frist place, and then log off again. Lather, rinse, repeat.

But here is what happened today when I tried to do what I always do, which is announce a new article to my own page on FB:

There was nothing “abusive” or spammy about announcing a blog post. That’s what writers do. When they write, they let their readers know. It just happened to be that what I was writing was not in support of the Obama White House. I am not a fan of him or his administration either, you see, and this is the source of the trouble. FB does not want people like me to speak out. FB is now in the hands of the Obama White House, and most likely has been all along.

I also frequently catch “someone” “somewhere” trying to prohibit me from posting on WordPress and I have a deep hunch that my recent trouble with my news blog just suddenly coming down and being offline for two days with no notice or explanation from WP is also about attempted censorship.

Boy, that stunt sure backfired. My blog traffic skyrocketed and yesterday it broke all records, with 22,023 visits in twelve hours. I have not added today’s visits to that number yet, but they are just as big.

The ugly little secret powers that be which have their arms into FB and WP up to the shoulders are doing all the wrong things to try to hush up Americans who dissent from the Obama Nation. Everything they do will continue to backfire and I will continue to grab screenshots of “all out internet surveillance moments” like this one below and post them.

So help me God, I will continue to write, post, publish and tell the truth about King Obama wearing no clothes, and God will help me keep an internet platform up and running to do this. If you believe in freedom of speech, and enjoy reading what I write, please consider making a one time $1 to $5 donation so I can put this blog on a private site host and get it off of the heavily monitored and surveilled WordPress platform. Then I won’t have to be interrupted by messages like this one below anymore. I now have become an expert at catching this screenshot before the telltale “spy window” goes away. – Chase Kyla Hunter 4.8.11

OBAMA CHEERLEADER MEREDITH VIEIRA GETS “TRUTHED OUT” BY DONALD TRUMP ON NATIONAL TV

Copyright 2011-3011 Alternative News Forum, All Rights Reserved.

American Tea Party patriots, who have been continuously reviled and ridiculed on mainstream news outlets that originate in the Big Apple, have now been at least partially vindicated by one of Kings of the Big Apple himself: Donald Trump. He has rightfully embraced the Tea Party’s call for Barack Obama to come clean on where he was born, and if he decides to run for president in 2012, he is going to defeat Barack Obama BY A STUNNING LANDSLIDE.

I can taste REAL hope and change in the air, and it originates from the possibility that in 2012 Trump will defeat this fraudulent liar and inept man, Obama, and that we will finally have a bold and courageous businessman and leader at the helm.

Imagine! An actual ‘Alpha Male‘ in the White House for the first time in nearly 40 years, [ what a concept] who can turn this country around. It cannot happen fast enough. Trump has the true grit and business acumen to begin rebuilding our crumbling national infrastructure, get our men and women home from overseas, close the borders to illegals, and begin creating jobs in America. He will do more in one year to turn this mess around than Barack Obama could do in eight years. Trust me on this. Trump is a given, proven leader with a track record 500 miles long of getting things done and inspiring others to do the same.

He will have the good sense to STOP the nation wrecking federal spending spree which is sending America over the cliff, and bring the country’s finances back into order. There is actual real hope for me if this man decides to run, not the fake media manufactured “faux hope and change campaign lie” perpetrated by 2008′s great liar and false political messiah, Obama.

Americans need a president they can believe in again. Run, Donald Run! This Tea Party patriot is behind you all the way.

Chase Kyla Hunter

FRENCH BURQA BAN GOES INTO FORCE ON MONDAY

AAP APRIL 9 2011

French police will from Monday become the first officers in Europe empowered to intercept Muslim women wearing full-face veils and to threaten them with fines if they refuse to expose their faces.

While some other countries and territories have drawn up bans on the burqa and the niqab, France -- home to Europe's largest Muslim population -- will be the first to risk stirring social tensions by putting one into practice.

The law comes into effect at an already fraught moment in relations between the state and France's Muslim minority, with President Nicolas Sarkozy accused of stigmatising Islam to win back votes from a resurgent far right.

French officials estimate that only around 2,000 women, from a total Muslim population estimated at between four and six million, wear a niqab or a burqa, full-face veils that are traditional in parts of Arabia and South Asia.

But many Muslims and rights watchdogs accuse Sarkozy of targeting one of France's most vulnerable and isolated groups to signal to anti-immigration voters that he shares their fear that Islam is a threat to French culture.

Other critics worry the law may be hard to enforce, since it had to be drawn up without reference to religion to ban any kind of face covering in public and since police officers will not be allowed to remove women's head coverings.

Many supporters of the law have defended it as a measure not designed to harm Islam, but to support a woman's right to walk unveiled, although the text makes it clear that a woman can not choose herself to cover her face in public.

Under a ministerial directive, anyone refusing to lift his or her veil to submit to an identity check can be taken to a police station. There, officers must try to persuade them to remove the garment, and can threaten fines.

A woman who repeatedly insists on appearing veiled in public can be fined 150 euros ($A205) and ordered to attend re-education classes.

There are much more severe penalties for anyone found guilty of forcing someone else to hide his or her face "through threats, violence, constraint, abuse of authority or power for reason of their gender".

Clearly aimed at fathers, husbands or religious leaders who force women to wear face-veils, and applicable to offences committed in public or in private, the law imposes a fine of 30,000 euros and a year in jail.

Moves to impose the law began in June when an opposition Communist lawmaker demanded a parliamentary inquiry into whether the wearing of full-face veils was becoming more prevalent in French Muslim communities.

Sarkozy waited only a couple of days before weighing in, declaring the full-face veil was "not welcome" in France and branding it a symbol of "servitude" and not of religious observance.

France's main Muslim representative body, the CFCM, partially agreed with him, issuing a statement arguing that insisting upon a niqab or a burqa was an "extremist" reading of the Koran and not a "religious obligation".

But other groups claimed the government had seized on an issue that touches a tiny minority and used it to stigmatise the entire Muslim community, which has been accused of failing to integrate into French life.

Foreign extremists, including fugitive al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden used the ban to argue France is at war with Islam, and called for attacks.

It is hard to gauge the mood of the bulk of veil wearing French Muslim women, but two -- who gave their names as Aya and Umm Isra -- said they would not challenge the ban in the street.

But, they added, if they can't wear their niqabs they will likely go out far less often, suggesting the ban could create a hidden underclass.

Sarkozy and his party have refused to back down and, seeing their opinion poll scores dipping and those of the anti-Islam National Front growing, have vowed to start a broader debate on the place of Islam in France.

The centre-right president will seek re-election next year and a strong showing for the Front's leader Marine Le Pen in the first round could fatally wound his campaign and allow the left's candidate to sweep past to victory.

Belgium's parliament has approved a similar law, but has yet to enforce it. In the Netherlands far-right leaders have proposed a ban, and in Italy the right-wing Northern League is lobbying for a ban on the French model.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

DIET COKE AND DEPRESSION: ASPARTAME: THE SWEET MISERY.

By Therese J. Borchard – Associate Editor -
www.psychcentral.com

When you are a recovering drunk, you don’t have a ton of options at parties. I used to be an avid Diet Coke drinker. But last summer my sister scared the, well you know what, out of me when she started talking about what aspartame can do to your system. I am chemically sensitive as it is, and many of you are, too, probably — which is why I don’t drink alcohol and gave up smoking.

But I was curious if Diet Coke was really that dangerous. I did some research, and as you well know, every paranoia will be confirmed eventually by some article on the web.

I found an article about Diet Coke on John McManamy’s website. What was particularly interesting to me was the relationship between aspartame and depression and bipolar disorder.

Says John:

In 1993, Dr Walton, who is a psychiatrist, conducted a study of 40 patients with unipolar depression and a similar number without a psychiatric history. The subjects were given 30 mgs per kg of body weight a day of aspartame or a placebo for 20 days (about equal to daily consumption if it completely replaced sugar).

Thirteen individuals completed the study, then an institutional review board called the project to a halt “because of the severity of reactions within the group of patients with a history of depression.” In a smaller, shorter crossover design, “again there was a significant difference between aspartame and placebo in number and severity of symptoms for patients with a history of depression, whereas for individuals without such a history there was not.”

Accordingly, the author concluded that “individuals with mood disorders are particularly sensitive to this artificial sweetener and its use in this population should be discouraged.”

As to further particulars of the study, based on the eight depressed subjects and five healthy subjects who completed it:

Three quarters of the patients with a history of depression taking aspartame reported feeling depressed vs none of the healthy subjects taking aspartame and about 40 percent of both groups taking a placebo. The 40 percent is probably a statistical aberration owing to the small numbers who completed the study. Nevertheless, the figures consistently show the depressed/aspartame group experiencing an array of symptoms in far greater numbers and severity, including: fatigue, nausea, headache, trouble remembering, insomnia, and other symptoms.

The depressed/placebo group showed almost none of these symptoms, along with the healthy/aspartame and healthy/placebo groups Dr Walton told this writer he believes aspartame inhibits serotonin synthesis by decreasing the availability of the precursor L-tryptophan, a finding borne out in another research team’s 1987 experiment on rats.

Remarkably, Dr Walton’s study is the only one we have related to both mood and aspartame. It would be helpful to get a second opinion, but no one else since, apparently, has tried to either replicate or refute his results. This may be due to the political and funding climate. “The NutraSweet company,” Dr Walton told this writer, “clearly tried to block our study.”

So we are left contemplating the fridge, where our Diet Coke is being chilled, with but one aging study to either guide us or confuse us. Once again, like the trial and error of our meds, we find ourselves human guinea pigs, this time experimenting with our diet. For many, aspartame may turn out to be a life-saving alternative to that well-documented sweet poison, sugar. Others who continue to experience depression, fatigue, and other symptoms, however, may want to moderate their aspartame consumption and see what happens.

I decided to give up Diet Coke like every other bloody drink I’ve given up. So now I’m back to my boring sparkling water and lime again. Snore.

http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2011/03/14/diet-coke-and-depression/

ANONYMOUS DECLARES WAR ON PENTAGON

Sunday, March 13, 2011

EWEN CAMERON, MEMORY THIEF

PART 1

PART 2

PART 3

SHOCK TACTICS: TREATMENT OR TORTURE?

Ed Pilkington visits the Boston school that uses electric shock as a treatment for children and adults with severe autism or emotional problems

  • Ed PilkingtonEd Pilkington The Guardian,
  • Judge Rotenberg Center
    External pockets, triggered by remote control, are used at Matthew Israel's Boston school in treating aggressive hand movements. Photograph: Rick Friedman

    The entrance to the Judge Rotenberg Centre, in a suburb of Boston, is a riot of bright colours and surreal designs. The receptionist greets visitors from a deep purple chair in front of yellow and pink neon panels. Corridors are lit by elaborate chandeliers and lined with 6ft models of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck. There is a meeting space, called the Whimsy Room, that has a purple shag-pile carpet, and pink, mauve and lime-green walls hung with carnival masks.

    But the decor is far from the most unusual aspect of this establishment. It is the only school in the US, perhaps the world, that uses pain as a treatment for children and adults with severe autism or emotional problems.

    Residents at the school carry small rucksacks, trailing wires that lead under their clothes and end in electrodes attached to their skin. Each rucksack contains a box, operated by staff members via remote control. When a button on the controller is pressed, a signal is sent generating a charge that delivers an electric shock to the skin. The teachers regularly inflict electric shocks on students, some as young as eight, zapping them for up to two seconds on their legs, arms or stomach.

    Ever since it was founded, 40 years ago, the school has been the subject of fierce controversy. Critics say the use of pain on society's most vulnerable members is a disgrace that should not be tolerated in any country. But supporters of the school, including several parents, say its practice of "aversive therapy" has improved lives, and in some cases saved their children from self-induced injury or even death.

    The school's founder, Matthew Israel, is every bit as unconventional as the environment he has created. A short, quietly-spoken man with a mop of tightly-curled hair, he first came across the study of punishment and reward as an undergraduate psychology student at Harvard in the 1950s. He signed up for a course by the famous behaviourist BF Skinner, who taught his pupils that, just as pigeons or rats could be trained to change their habits in laboratory experiments, so could human beings.

    Skinner had written a novel called Walden Two, in which he envisaged a fictitious community of 1,000 people engineered to produce the happiest and most efficient society. Every activity in the community is shared, from child rearing to cooking and manual labour. Positive emotions are rewarded and negative ones discouraged; meanwhile, children are given rigorous ethical training to turn them into model citizens.

    Israel read the novel and was hooked. "Skinner believed you could use intelligent planning to make people healthy, happy and creative. He argued that it should be possible to develop a scientific approach to behaviour. That was very captivating to me."

    After completing a doctorate in psychology at Harvard, Israel decided to make Skinner's imagined world a reality. He set up his own behaviouralist communes in the 1960s, along the lines of Walden Two. "They didn't work well," he says. "People had different ideas."

    But the failed experiments got him thinking about children. There was a three-year-old girl at one of his communes who was spoiled and demanding. He found that, with the application of what Israel calls "mild punishments", she could be transformed into a charming child.

    It was here that Israel parted company with Skinner, who explicitly states in Walden Two that punishment is not allowed. But once Israel had discovered what he believed to be its transformative potential, there was no holding him back. He devised a new regime for children with special needs, including those on the autistic spectrum. By mixing positive rewards for good behaviour with punishment for bad, he believed he could steer children away from self-harming or aggressive habits.

    He started a school in 1971, initially in Rhode Island and then outside Boston. In the early years, he used improvised punishments: spanking with spatulas, pinching (he calls it "muscle squeezing") and dousing kids with a water spray. In the late 1980s, he adopted a more structured approach, deploying a shock machine that had been built by the parents of an autistic girl. The problem was, the charge generated by the machine was judged too weak to change the children's behaviour. On a single day, one of the children in Israel's school, Brandon, then 12, was given no fewer than 5,000 shocks, without success.

    So Israel decided to develop his own, more powerful, pain machine. He invented the GED, or Graduated Electronic Decelerator. It is a basic electricity generator that puts out a 15 to 30 milliamp shock, lasting for two seconds. Later, Israel decided that an even more powerful machine was called for to treat the severest of cases, and designed the GED-4, which has three times the electrical charge of the basic GED.

    These devices are not to be confused with ECT, or electroconvulsive therapy, where electricity is pulsed through the brain, often as a treatment for depression. Israel's shocks are applied to the skin as a means of discouraging bad behaviour, rather than changing a person's mental state.

    Students are given shocks when they behave badly – they may be disruptive in class, say, or threaten staff. However, Israel insists, most of them make the connection between problem behaviour and pain fairly quickly, and stop acting up within weeks. He does concede that some on the autistic spectrum may need to keep the GED long term. For them, he says, the machine is just like wearing "glasses or hearing aids".

    Israel is fully aware of the controversial nature of what he does. He is, he says, at the centre of a "political firestorm". "Any humane person wants to avoid punishment," he says. "Most professionals don't want to touch it, even though they know it's a very effective treatment."

    But he insists the shocks feel no worse than a two-second bee sting. And that the alternatives are far worse. Students can be so dangerous to themselves or others they can threaten lives, he says, and more conventional care centres are often ill-equipped to deal with them. They end up either expelled, or heavily doped with psychotropic drugs.

    Judge Rotenberg Center: matthew israel Students are given shocks when they behave badly. Matthew Israel says most of them make the connection between problem behaviour and pain fairly quickly. Photograph: Rick Friedman

    By contrast, Israel takes pride in turning nobody away, however severe their condition. "Some of our students have been expelled from 20 or more programmes, and we take all of our students off the drugs they are on when they come here. Compare that with skin shocks that have no side effects and no long-term damage," he says.

    Israel shows me a video featuring some of the most severely autistic students before and after they are given electric shocks. It is deeply disturbing. Here is Janine screaming and banging her head on the wall. Israel's voice tells us she used to slap herself and pull out her own hair, 24 hours a day. "Once the GED was introduced into Janine's programme, she became much calmer and happier." The next sequence shows Janine going out to lunch with staff, her self-abusive habits seemingly under control and her hair grown back.

    Here is Brandon, the boy who was shocked 5,000 times in one day. Israel tells us he used to vomit up his food, starving himself to 52lb (24kg). Over footage of Brandon vomiting and spitting, he says, "We found there was no medical solution to his problems. The only thing that saved his life was a remote control skin shock device."

    When the video ends, Israel sits back in his chair and says, "Most people aren't aware of the severity of the problems some individuals have. We have a student who has pulled out 11 of his adult teeth by himself. A young woman hit her head so hard with her knee she detached her retinas. There's a boy who pushed his hands way down his throat and ripped up parts of his oesophagus. Once you've seen that sort of self-abuse, why wouldn't you want to try a treatment, even though it's controversial?"

    He then takes me to the Yellow Brick Road, the positive reward area of the school where children who have fulfilled their contract with their carers are treated to the land of Oz. There are full-sized models of the Tin Man, Scarecrow and the Lion, a Crystal Forest of trees with cut-glass leaves, and an animatronic Good Witch Of The West into which students can insert a reward token and trigger a recorded message: "Hello. Have you been a good witch or a bad witch? You must be good, because you are about to receive a wonderful reward in the Reward Store."

    The store looks like a chintzy shopping mall. Here students can exchange tokens for CDs, clothes, cosmetics, jewellery, toys and trinkets. Alternatively, they can spend their rewards in an arcade with a pool table and video games, which is where we find Mike playing computer baseball. He is carrying the GED on his back and has electrodes on his waist. Israel tells me that Mike, 20, is on the autistic spectrum and has been at the school for two years. When he arrived, he would refuse to get out of bed and would lash out at staff. "He was kept separate from other students because he was dangerous. Now he's blossoming. This is his first year off medications since he was six."

    I ask Mike, in Israel's presence, what it feels like to be zapped with the GED.

    "Electric shock."

    Does it hurt? He nods.

    How has it changed his life?

    "Better."

    Is he scared of it?

    "A little bit."

    We return to Israel's office and he ushers in Louisa Goldberg. She is the mother of Andrew, 30, who was born brain damaged from oxygen deprivation and is, she says, an "adult-sized toddler".

    At nine, Andrew was put in a residential care home because his parents were worn out by caring for him around the clock. "Our younger son was being beaten up regularly. We were all getting our hair pulled and being bitten. We couldn't keep him safe."

    Andrew stayed for several years at the home, but as a teenager grew more and more aggressive. He was put on psychotropic drugs to calm him down. He began sleeping through day and night. "He would sit and drool. He was a zombie, basically. It was just no life for him."

    Eventually, Goldberg says, the care home told her it could no longer look after Andrew. They left him in the parking lot of a local hospital. Which is how she came to bring him to Israel's school.

    Andrew was put on the GED, starting with an average of 17 shocks a day. He has been at the school for 11 years, and still wears the device. How does she come to accept the infliction of pain on her own son?

    "We realise it doesn't sound so nice," she says. "People refer to it as torture, but as a parent the real torture for us was seeing Andrew going nowhere. Sitting there like a zombie on medication. It's given our child back his life."

    Last June, the human rights group Disability Rights International released a coruscating report that sought to debunk Israel's case for "aversive treatment". The use of electric shocks was not a treatment at all, it said, but torture.

    On the back of the report, the then UN special rapporteur on torture, Manfred Nowak, was asked by ABC television for his assessment of the regime. Did it amount to torture? "Yes. I have no doubts about it," Nowak replied. "It is inflicted in a situation where a victim is powerless. And, I mean, a child being subjected to electric shocks, how much more powerless can you be?" The US Justice department is currently investigating the centre under disability discrimination laws.

    Put at its most simple, the argument made against the school by its opponents is that it uses public money to cause pain to vulnerable children. The money is by no means insignificant. There are 225 students at the centre, drawn from seven states across America, with state or federal agencies paying about $220,000 a year per child. That gives Israel an annual turnover of almost $50m, which he uses to pay the 900 staff and keep the premises in their sparkling condition, as well as spending huge sums on lobbying. Last year, he paid Rudy Giuliani's law firm $100,000 to lobby against a bill in Congress that might have outlawed the use of electric shocks.

    Two-thirds of the school's students are under 21, and 97 of them wear the GED backpacks. This figure might be higher were it not for a court case in the 1980s – the result of one of the most serious attempts by opponents to have the school closed down. Ultimately, a Massachusetts judge, Ernest Rotenberg, ruled it could stay open, with the proviso that not only parents but also the courts would have to approve every child before he or she was subjected to electric shocks. Israel renamed the school the Judge Rotenberg Centre in his honour.

    Of those 97 students, some are emotionally disturbed – they may be from difficult backgrounds, have attention deficit disorder, or just be unruly; many are children who could quite easily be cared for, critics say, with the use of more conventional, positive therapies. Others have developmental issues – they may, like Andrew Goldberg, have had problems at birth or be at the severe end of the autistic spectrum.

    Brandon is the most extreme case. Though he's been living at the school since 1989, he's still shocked on average 33 times a week. There are five other students at the school who, according to the Massachusetts authorities, are shocked on average more than 10 times each a week, and all of them have been in the centre for at least eight years. Janine, 40, has been a resident for more than 25 years and still wears the GED 24 hours a day.

    A recent inspection by the Massachusetts Department of Developmental Services questioned this long-term use of electric shocks, and objected to their application for minor infringements such as spilling drinks, refusing orders and picking food up from the floor. Rather pointedly, its report concluded: "Staff need to keep the floor clean."

    Even more controversially, Israel still practises a treatment he calls Behaviour Rehearsal Lessons, or BRLs. He created this technique for students considered to have a behavioural problem so potentially dangerous it had to be prevented in advance. Israel uses the example of someone who has the habit of jumping out of fast-moving cars. "You don't even want him to do it once," he says.

    The student is placed in a chair, often restrained with straps. Then, for up to 10 minutes at a time, they are ordered to carry out precisely the behaviour they have been told not to do. If, say, they have the habit of slapping themselves on the head, they are ordered to do so. If they try to get away, they are zapped with the stronger GED-4 shock machine. But if they follow orders, and slap themselves, they are zapped even more frequently. The process is repeated until they sit motionless in the chair for a full 10 minutes.

    Hilary Cook, now 22, who spent three years at the school until 2009, remembers vividly being put on BRLs. "They would rush in unannounced and prompt me to do behaviours that were inappropriate, then shock me for doing them. That put me in a constant state of fear, because it could happen at any moment."

    The system is open to abuse. The school has 29 residential properties in which students sleep at night and, in August 2007, a call came in to one of them to report that two students had misbehaved earlier in the evening and needed to be shocked. It was 2am, but the staff located the two students, aged 16 and 19, and began zapping them in their sleep. The boys awoke and protested that they had done nothing wrong, but the shocks continued. Over a three-hour period, one boy was shocked 77 times, the other 29. It later transpired that the initial call had been a hoax.

    Such incidents have, of course, generated much negative publicity. But for Laurie Ahern of Disability Rights International, the core objection to the school is simple. "It's horrible that children and adults with disabilities are still, in 2011, being tortured through the use of electricity. We wouldn't tolerate that in Guantánamo or Abu Ghraib. We don't do it in domestic prisons any more. If your neighbour used a Taser on their children to get them to behave, you'd have them arrested. They'd be picked up even if they did it to their dog."

    Carol Povey, of the UK's National Autistic Society, agrees: "Those purporting to help people using electric shocks demonstrate an appalling disregard for the individual's human rights. It is essential to properly understand and manage challenging behaviour, rather than attempting to simply control or prevent it through force. The right support at the right time can make an enormous difference."

    Israel refused to let me experience the electric shocks first hand, saying there had been too many "sensationalist" accounts. Instead, Hilary Cook describes them for me: "They tell parents it feels like a bee sting, but what it really feels like is intense pain that lasts for several seconds. I was afraid, waiting for the shocks to come."

    Since leaving the school in 2009, she has been on a positive therapeutic programme that has taught her to cope with severe emotional problems. "Electric shocks only work as long as you are receiving them. They don't teach you how to change your life."

    One parent, who asked to remain anonymous, has a 26-year-old son who was at the school for seven years until he left last year. She says she liked the look of the school and its non-medication policy, but wasn't aware of its "dark side".

    "They said it was like a bee sting, but I've seen my son being given shocks so powerful his limbs shook. He was being shocked up to 20 times a day. It was cruel. It was inhumane. I pray to God to forgive me for putting my son through that.

Friday, March 4, 2011

FOR A NATION ALREADY FEELING THE PINCH, A STARK DOUBLE WARNING: FOOD AND FUEL BILLS TO ROCKET

  • UN report revealed rises in bread, pasta, breakfast cereal, dairy and meat prices are on the horizon
  • Government analysts have suggested oil prices could double from $80 a barrel last year to $160 this year

Families face massive rises in fuel and food costs, ministers warned last night.

A catastrophic 1970s-style oil price spike is on the cards while the price of supermarket basics continues to soar.

Vince Cable said the twin threat puts the economic recovery at risk and piles pressure on struggling households.

spiralling: Families face massive rises in fuel and food costs

spiralling: Families face massive rises in fuel and food costs

‘We now have the prospect of a fully-fledged energy and commodity price shock squeezing real wages and pushing up inflation,’ said the Business Secretary.

Chris Huhne, his Lib Dem colleague and Energy Secretary, said the political turmoil in the Arab world could send oil prices skywards.

Higher fuel costs hit food producers, pushing up the prices paid by consumers. That would add to inflationary pressure and increase the prospect of interest rate rises.

Economists also fear that food price hikes will reduce economic activity and squeeze household spending as families desperately cut back elsewhere.

A UN report yesterday revealed that rises in bread, pasta, breakfast cereal, dairy and meat prices are on the horizon – irrespective of future oil price hikes.

The commodity price of key foods rose again in February, making it the eighth successive month of increases, according to the UN Food & Agriculture Organisation.

It pointed out that the export prices of wheat, corn and rice are up by a staggering 70 per cent in one year.

Warning: Business secretary Vince Cable said the country faced the prospect of a fully-fledged energy and commodity price shock
Warning: Chris Huhne, the Lib Dem Energy Secretary, said the political turmoil in the Arab world could prompt oil prices to rise

Warning: Vince Cable, left, said the rise in oil and food prices puts the economic recovery at risk; while Chris Huhne, right, believes sustained sky-high oil prices will transform green economics

British bakers expect a standard loaf to cost 10p to 15p more within weeks.

Higher grain prices also lead to more expensive meat and dairy products in the shops because of their heavy use in animal feed. Gary Sharkey of Hovis said: ‘Bakers cannot possibly absorb the latest round of increases.

‘Flour costs have risen yet again, and there have been big increases in energy costs, a major factor in baking, plus significant rises in oil prices affecting daily distribution costs.’

Global commodity prices are running at their highest level since 2008, when food riots rocked many poor states.

A report by investment bank UBS earlier this week said UK supermarkets and manufacturers had taken advantage of the global situation to push up prices by more than was justified.

Unrest: A former Libyan flag is held over a crowd of people opposed to the rule of Colonel Gaddafi. Analysts predict oil prices will surge even higher if the political turmoil gripping North Africa spreads across the Gulf

Unrest: A former Libyan flag is held over a crowd of people opposed to the rule of Colonel Gaddafi. Analysts predict oil prices will surge even higher if the political turmoil gripping North Africa spreads across the Gulf

It found that British prices were rising at an annual rate of 4.9 per cent, compared with 3.6 per cent in Germany and 1.8 per cent across the euro zone. The United States had a 1.5 per cent rise.

The report said commodity inflation would justify a 3 to 3.5 per cent rise in processed food prices, but UK supermarkets have lifted prices by 6 to 6.5 per cent.

Extreme weather, ranging from droughts in Russia to floods in China and Australia, has particularly hit global wheat production.

The UN report said: ‘We expect a tightening of the global cereal supply and demand balance in 2010/11.

‘In the face of a growing demand and a decline in world cereal production in 2010, global cereal stocks this year are expected to fall sharply because of a decline in inventories of wheat and coarse grains.

‘International cereal prices have increased sharply with export prices of major grains up at least 70 percent from February last year.’

UN food chart

The FAO’s David Hallam said: ‘Unexpected oil price spikes could further exacerbate an already precarious situation in food markets. This adds even more uncertainty concerning the price outlook just as plantings for crops in some of the major growing regions are about to start.’

In a speech to City businessmen and bankers last night, Mr Cable said Britain was still facing a ‘difficult’ recovery.

‘There is no Delia Smith cookery book providing a simple recipe for producing growth, let alone in the abnormal post-crisis environment which we inhabit,’ he added.

Oil prices are currently running at over $100 a barrel – the highest level since 2008.

But analysts predict prices will surge even higher if the political turmoil gripping North Africa spreads across the Gulf.

Soaring oil prices will have a direct impact on fuel prices at the pumps, which are already at the record average level of 130p a litre.

Government analysts have suggested that prices could double from $80 a barrel last year to $160 this year and stay there for a prolonged period. Such a spike would be on a par with the oil price shock of the 1970s that caused so global havoc.

It could wipe £45billion off the value of the UK economy over the next two years, according to Mr Huhne.

He said: ‘This is not just far-off speculation – it is a threat here and now.’

Mr Huhne is an advocate of greener forms of energy and used his warning over rising oil prices to justify a switch to renewable sources such as windfarms.

He said that sustained oil prices above $100-a-barrel will transform the economics of renewable energy.

Friday, February 18, 2011

IS IT A BIRD? IS IT A PLANE? NO, IT'S THE ARMY'S LATEST $4MILLION SPY DRONE DISGUISED AS A HUMMINGBIRD, MEASURING JUST 16 CENTIMETRES

By Daily Mail Reporter 17th February 2011

A pocket-sized spy drone disguised as a hummingbird has been unveiled by a major Pentagon contractor measuring just 16 centimetres and weighing less than an AA battery.

The mini spy plane can fly up to 11 miles an hour and took five years to develop at a cost of $4million.

Army chiefs hope to use the drone’s tiny camera to spy on enemy positions in war zones without arousing detection and eventually deploy it into both rural and urban environments.

Unsuspecting: The tiny hummingbird spy drone has a wingspan of just 16 centimetres and propels itself like a real bird - just by flapping its little wings

Unsuspecting: The tiny hummingbird spy drone has a wingspan of just 16 centimetres and propels itself like a real bird - just by flapping its little wings

Experts hope the drone, which can fly just by flapping its wings, compared with current models which rely on propellers, will eventually be able to swoop through open windows and perch on power lines.

The demonstration by AeroVironment – one of the world’s biggest drone suppliers – lasted eight minutes and saw the new creation fly through a door into an building and out again, and withstand winds of five miles per hour.

Todd Hylton, Hummingbird programme manager for the Pentagon’s research arm said it ‘paves the way for a new generation of aircraft with the agility and appearance of small birds.’

Test: The $4million project has taken five years. The latest demonstration saw the drone fly into and out of a building at 11mph, and withstand 5mph winds for the eight minute flight

Test: The $4million project has taken five years. The latest demonstration saw the drone fly into and out of a building at 11mph, and withstand 5mph winds for the eight minute flight

Matt Keennon, AeroVironment’s manager on the project, said the milestone of building a machine inspired by nature pushes the limits of aerodynamics.

He added: ‘This is a new form of man-made flight’.

Two years ago the company showed off its first Hummingbird prototype, managing just 20 seconds. The latest flight lasted eight minutes, with engineers expecting longer flights as development continues.

AeroVironment already produces a number of different drones for the US Army.

Last year it had 2,182 orders from the army for its Raven drone, which weighs four pounds with a wingspan of four-and-a-half feet.

Current drones, like the $30million Global Observer, pictured, are shaped like planes - but the new hummingbird creation is aimed at going unnoticed behind enemy lines

Current drones, like the $30million Global Observer, pictured, are shaped like planes - but the new hummingbird creation is aimed at going unnoticed behind enemy lines

Around 86 per cent of its orders come from the Government, meaning last year it was paid a whopping $215million from the Department of Defense.

The company, based in California with 732 full-time employees, expects to sell even more drones to the Government once rules are relaxed to allow spying within America.

The unveiling of the Hummingbird comes just weeks after the same company launched its $30million Global Observer with a wingspan similar to a Boeing 747 which can survey an area as large as Afghanistan.

Chris Fisher, project manager at AeroVironment explained: ‘It gives the guy on the ground the opportunity to see what’s on the other side of the hill. There’s only so much you can see with binoculars. A small [drone] can get up and go over the hill. That gives the ground soldier a capability that is huge.

He added: ‘One of the things we benefit from is the average young person in the military has hours and hours of video games experience. They are attuned to holding these things in their hands; moving the joysticks around with their thumbs and that’s how our planes are flown. To an 18-year-old it’s extremely simple.’


FROM PRISON, MADOFF SAYS BANKS ‘HAD TO KNOW’ OF FRAUD

February 15, 2011 By DIANA B. HENRIQUES

BUTNER, N.C. — Bernard L. Madoff said he never thought the collapse of his Ponzi scheme would cause the sort of destruction that has befallen his family.

In his first interview for publication since his arrest in December 2008, Mr. Madoff — looking noticeably thinner and rumpled in khaki prison garb — maintained that family members knew nothing about his crimes.

But during a private two-hour interview in a visitor room here on Tuesday, and in earlier e-mail exchanges, he asserted that unidentified banks and hedge funds were somehow “complicit” in his elaborate fraud, an about-face from earlier claims that he was the only person involved.

Mr. Madoff, who is serving a 150-year sentence, seemed frail and a bit agitated compared with the stoic calm he maintained before his incarceration in 2009, perhaps burdened by sadness over the suicide of his son Mark in December.

Besides that loss, his family also has faced stacks of lawsuits, the potential forfeiture of most of their assets, and relentless public suspicion and enmity that cut Mr. Madoff and his wife Ruth off from their children.

In many ways, however, Mr. Madoff seemed unchanged. He spoke with great intensity and fluency about his dealings with various banks and hedge funds, pointing to their “willful blindness” and their failure to examine discrepancies between his regulatory filings and other information available to them.

“They had to know,” Mr. Madoff said. “But the attitude was sort of, ‘If you’re doing something wrong, we don’t want to know.’ ”

While he acknowledged his guilt in the interview and said nothing could excuse his crimes, he focused his comments laserlike on the big investors and giant institutions he dealt with, not on the financial pain he caused thousands of his more modest investors. In an e-mail written on Jan. 13, he observed that many long-term clients made more in legitimate profits from him in the years before the fraud than they could have elsewhere. “I would have loved for them to not lose anything, but that was a risk they were well aware of by investing in the market,” he wrote.

Mr. Madoff said he was startled to learn about some of the e-mails and messages raising doubts about his results — now emerging in lawsuits — that bankers were passing around before his scheme collapsed.

“I’m reading more now about how suspicious they were than I ever realized at the time,” he said with a faint smile.

He did not assert that any specific bank or fund knew about or was an accomplice in his Ponzi scheme, which lasted at least 16 years and consumed about $20 billion in lost cash and almost $65 billion in paper wealth. Rather, he cited a failure to conduct normal scrutiny.

Both the interview and the e-mail correspondence were conducted as part of this reporter’s research for a coming book on the Madoff scandal, “The Wizard of Lies: Bernie Madoff and the Death of Trust,” for publication this spring by Times Books, a division of Henry Holt & Company.

In the interview and e-mails, he also claimed he had been helping the court-appointed trustee who is seeking to recover lost billions on behalf of his swindled clients. In e-mails, Mr. Madoff said repeatedly that he provided useful information to Irving H. Picard, the trustee trying to recover assets for the fraud victims. He met with Mr. Picard’s team over four days last summer, he said. The e-mails were written in December and January, but he only recently agreed that they could be made public.

In prison, Mr. Madoff’s access to the outside world is both limited and monitored. All visitors must be approved by prison authorities, who also screen his limited collect calls and his incoming and outgoing e-mails and letters, though interviews with lawyers are less restricted and can be conducted in private.

Asked about his cell, he described a room about 12 feet square with a big window looking out on the grounds; he said he had a roommate, the second since he arrived at the prison.

It was clear from the e-mails and interview here that Mr. Madoff closely followed news related to his case in December, the second anniversary of his arrest. He lashed out at what he called some of the “disgraceful” coverage of the suicide of his son Mark on Dec. 11.

Disputing reports that he refused to attend any funeral services for Mark, he said the prison informed him it would not approve a request for him to attend a service because of “the public safety issue” and the limited time available to make arrangements. He concluded any funeral he attended “would be a media circus” and that it “would be cruel to my family” to put them through that, he wrote on Dec. 29.

Regarding his meetings with Mr. Picard’s legal team, Mr. Madoff asserted in an e-mail written on Dec. 19 that he had given Mr. Picard’s legal team “information I knew would be instrumental in recovering assets from those people complicit in the mess I put myself into.”

In a message 10 days later, he was even more explicit about what he told the trustee's team: “I am saying that the banks and funds were complicit in one form or another.”

Mr. Madoff’s claims must be weighed against his tenuous credibility. After deceiving federal regulators and supposedly sophisticated investors for at least 16 years, he would certainly be branded as a liar by defense lawyers if he appeared as a witness against any defendant in a courtroom — a fact he acknowledged somewhat ruefully during the interview on Tuesday.

Despite his many references to the complicity of others, he acknowledged in the Dec. 19 e-mail that he had not shared his information with the federal prosecutors working on criminal cases related to his fraud — although the trustee most likely would have done so, if Mr. Madoff’s information was relevant to the investigation.

Mr. Madoff wrote in an e-mail that while he was willing “from the beginning” to give prosecutors information “to help recover assets only, I refused to help provide them with criminal evidence.” In the interview he declined to discuss any of the criminal cases under investigation.

In the months after the Picard team’s prison interviews, the trustee’s law firm, Baker & Hostetler, filed hundreds of civil lawsuits seeking approximately $90 billion in damages and fictional profits withdrawn from Mr. Madoff’s scheme over the years. The defendants in those cases included the Wilpon family, the owners of the New York Mets; JPMorgan Chase, which served for decades as Mr. Madoff’s primary banker; and Sonja Kohn, the Viennese financier at the hub of a network of hedge funds that invested heavily with Mr. Madoff.

Mr. Madoff said about Fred Wilpon and Saul Katz, Mr. Wilpon’s brother-in-law and business partner: “They knew nothing. They knew nothing.”

There was no obvious sign that any of those lawsuits were based on evidence or guidance from Mr. Madoff. All the defendants have said they had no knowledge of the fraud and have denied the trustee’s claims that, as financially sophisticated investors, they should have been suspicious from the beginning.

Mr. Picard declined to comment on whether his team had interviewed Mr. Madoff and would not say whether information from him had contributed to the vast body of litigation filed since last summer.

In some e-mails, Mr. Madoff conceded that Mr. Picard’s team conducted its own investigation into the withdrawals made by some big clients, in the years before the Ponzi scheme collapsed, to determine who might have known what and when. Such withdrawals could indicate that investors could have been aware of the fraud, which could increase their liability.

However, Mr. Madoff added, “the facts are that I alone was present at certain meetings with these clients.”

To date, none of the major banks or hedge funds that did business with Mr. Madoff have been accused by federal prosecutors of knowingly investing in his Ponzi scheme. However, Mr. Picard in civil lawsuits has asserted that executives at some banks expressed suspicions for years, yet continued to do business with Mr. Madoff and steer their clients’ money into his hands.

All the financial entities facing civil lawsuits by Madoff victims and Mr. Picard have denied they had any knowledge of the fraud.

In a related e-mail on Jan. 12, Mr. Madoff cited out-of-court settlements that some banks and funds had negotiated with private Madoff investors over the last two years and claimed some settlements were made “to keep me quiet” about the role the institutions played in “creating my situation” and about the identity of the beneficial owners of some of their private accounts.

Mr. Picard has already recovered roughly $10 billion through asset sales and settlements with several foreign banks and a few significant Madoff clients, including the estate of a private investor, Jeffry Picower, and the family of Carl Shapiro, a philanthropist in Palm Beach, Fla.

While the Picower settlement had been under negotiation since at least the fall of 2009, the settlements with the Shapiro family and a Swiss bank, Union Bancaire PrivĂ©e, both came after lawyers from Mr. Picard’s firm visited the prison here in Butner. But because both settlements came before Mr. Picard had filed any public claims in court, it is unclear whether information from Mr. Madoff was a factor in those settlement talks.

Neither Mr. Shapiro nor the Swiss bank has been accused of any complicity in Mr. Madoff’s crimes, and Mr. Picard has publicly acknowledged their good-faith cooperation with his inquiries when he announced the settlement agreements, which totaled more than $1 billion.

The only people formally charged with complicity in Mr. Madoff’s crime are his former auditor and members of his own staff.

Although Mr. Madoff swore in court that he had carried out his elaborate fraud on his own, his accountant, David G. Friehling, and Mr. Madoff’s senior lieutenant, Frank DiPascali, have pleaded guilty and are cooperating with prosecutors. Five other former Madoff employees have been indicted; they have asserted their innocence and are awaiting trial.

While Mr. Madoff said he was determined to aid the trustee’s efforts to recover assets, he was also critical of the trustee’s reach, claiming that Mr. Picard was seeking far more money than was needed to resolve valid investor claims.

In addition to the customer claims for the cash losses and the paper wealth that vanished, the Madoff estate also faces claims by general creditors, like unpaid vendors and landlords, who cannot recover until all the valid customer claims are paid.

Mr. Madoff argued in several e-mails that Mr. Picard’s responsibility was to return only the $20 billion in out-of-pocket cash that investors lost in his scheme.

Given that Mr. Picard has already recovered roughly $10 billion, Mr. Madoff calculated that the lawsuits against major banks and hedge funds would produce more than enough to cover the rest of the cash losses without Mr. Picard having to pursue “clawback” litigation against some longtime investors who withdrew more from their accounts than they put.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: February 17, 2011

An article on Wednesday about Bernard L. Madoff, the imprisoned creator of a multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme, misidentified, in two passages, whom Mr. Madoff met with in what he said were efforts to help Irving H. Picard, a court-appointed trustee, recover assets for the fraud victims. As the article correctly noted elsewhere, Mr. Madoff met with members of Mr. Picard’s legal team, not with Mr. Picard personally. The article also gave an incorrect middle initial for Mr. Madoff’s accountant. He is David G. Friehling, not David H.

RESTORING ECONOMIC SOVEREIGNTY:THE PUSH FOR STATE-OWNED BANKS

BY ELLEN BROWN

“It is time to declare economic sovereignty from the multinational banks that are responsible for much of our current economic crisis. Every year we ship over a billion dollars in Oregon taxpayer dollars to out-of-state and multinational banks in the form of deposits, only to see that money invested elsewhere. It’s time to put our money to work for Oregonians.”

- Bill Bradbury, former Oregon Senate President and Secretary of State, quoted in The Nation.

Responding to an unfilled need for credit for local government, local businesses and consumers, three states in the last month have introduced bills for state-owned banks - Oregon, Washington and Maryland - joining Illinois, Virginia, Massachusetts and Hawaii to bring the total number to seven.

While Wall Street is reporting record profits, local banks are floundering, credit for small businesses and consumers remains tight, and local governments are teetering on bankruptcy. There is even talk of allowing state governments to file for bankruptcy, something current legislation forbids. The federal government and Federal Reserve have managed to find trillions of dollars to prop up the Wall Street banks that precipitated the credit crisis, but they have not extended this largesse to the taxpayers and local governments that have been forced to pick up the tab.

In January, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke announced that the Fed had ruled out a central bank bailout for state and local governments. The collective state budget deficit for 2011 is projected at $140 billion, a mere 1% of the $12.3 trillion the Fed managed to come up with in liquidity, short-term loans, and other financial arrangements to bail out Wall Street. But Chairman Bernanke said the Fed is limited by statute to buying municipal government debt with maturities of six months or less that is directly backed by tax or other assured revenue, a form of debt that makes up less than 2% of the overall muni market. State and municipal governments, it seems, are on their own.

Faced with federal inaction and growing local budget crises, an increasing number of states are exploring the possibility of setting up their own state-owned banks, following the model of North Dakota, the only state that seems to have escaped the credit crisis unscathed. The 92-year-old Bank of North Dakota (BND), currently the only state-owned U.S. bank, has helped North Dakota avoid the looming budgetary disasters of other states. In 2009, North Dakota sported the largest budget surplus it had ever had. The BND helps fund not only local government but local banks and businesses, by providing matching funds for loans to commercial banks to support small business lending.

In the last month, three states have introduced bills for state-owned banks, following the North Dakota model. On January 11, a bill to establish a state-owned bank was introduced in the Oregon State legislature; on January 13, a similar bill was introduced in Washington State (discussed in an earlier article here); and on February 4, a bill was introduced in the Maryland legislature for a feasibility study looking into the possibilities. They join Illinois, Virginia, Hawaii and Massachusetts, all of which introduced similar bills in 2010.

Broad-Based Support

The bills are widely supported by small business owners. The Seattle Times reported on February 3 that 79% of 107 business owners surveyed by the Main Street Alliance of Washington supported the Washington bill. More than half said they had experienced a tightening of business credit, and three-fourths of those said they could create additional jobs if their credit needs were met.

A survey by the Main Street Alliance of Oregon produced similar results. Their survey, which covered 115 businesses in 28 communities, found that two-thirds of small-business owners had delayed or canceled expansions because of credit problems; 41% had been turned down for credit; and 42% had seen their credit terms deteriorate. Three-quarters of the business owners surveyed supported the Oregon bill.

Also supporting the idea of a state-owned bank is Oregon state treasurer Ted Wheeler, with this twist: He thinks Oregon can unlock additional lending capacity in partnership with existing institutions by creating a “virtual” bank. The state would not need to build new brick and mortar banks requiring hundreds of new employees to service them. The new tools afforded the state by being a “bank” could be arranged quickly and cheaply through a framework he calls a “virtual economic development bank.” In an OpEd posted on Oregonlive.com on February 9, he wrote:

This new model would consolidate Oregon’s various economic development loan programs in one place, and allow state government to step in as a new lending participant, which will help qualified Oregonians to secure additional financing. We also have strategic investment tools such as the Oregon Growth Account that could be better utilized as part of this framework.

Banks “create” money by leveraging their capital into loans. At an 8% capital requirement, they can leverage capital by a factor of 12, so long as they can attract sufficient deposits (collected or borrowed) to clear the outgoing checks. States give this leveraging power away when they put their deposits in Wall Street banks and invest their capital there.

State and municipal governments have assets tucked all over the state in separate rainy day funds, which are largely invested in Wall Street banks for a very modest return. At the same time, states are borrowing from Wall Street at much higher interest rates and have to worry about such things as credit ratings, late fees and interest rate swaps, which have proven to be very good investments for Wall Street and very bad investments for local governments.

By consolidating their assets into their own state-owned banks, state and local governments can leverage their own funds to finance their own operations; and they can do this essentially interest-free, since they will own the bank and will get the interest back. The BND contributed over $300 million to state coffers in the past decade, a notable achievement for a state with a population that is less than one-tenth the size of Los Angeles County.

The growing movement to establish local economic sovereignty through state-owned banks has been a grassroots effort that has grown spontaneously in response to unmet needs for local credit. In Oregon, the push has come from an active volunteer group called Oregonians for a State Bank working with the Working Families Party. In Washington, the Main Street Alliance has played a major role. The Alliance is a project of what is now called the Alliance for a Just Society (formerly NWFCO), a coalition of several northwest states’ Citizen Action Networks and others. The chief legislative champion in Washington State is Rep. Bob Hasegawa. In Maryland, the campaign was initiated by the Wisconsin-based Center for State Innovation (CSI), the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and the Progressive States Network. Progressive Maryland is a prominent NGO supporter. Detailed analyses of the Washington and Oregon initiatives and their projected benefits have been done by CSI. For grassroots efforts in other states and for petitions that can be signed, see http://publicbankinginstitute.org/state-info.htm.

RAY McGOVERN DISCUSSES BRUTAL ARREST AT SECRETARY CLINTON'S INTERNET FREEDOM SPEECH

By Rob Kall opednews.com
On Tuesday, as U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spoke on issues of free speech at George Washington University, 71-year-old former CIA analyst Ray McGovern was assaulted, dragged from the room and double handcuffed causing profuse bleeding.

What had he done to elicit this treatment? He stood in "silent witness."

This was not the first time this former Army intelligence officer employed this form of peaceful, civil resistance. In 1992, McGovern who is a Roman Catholic, expressed his dissent of the church's position on women as priests by standing during Sunday Mass in what became a years' long protest. This civil protest ultimately resulted in media attention and a conversation with James Cardinal Hickey.

Ray explained that it was in this spirit that he chose to protest Clinton's policies and track record.
"Hillary is the driving force, together with a few others, behind the wars in Afghanistan. She's one of the big hawks in Iran. When I look at her and her husband that they don't know the first thing about war. I do and so do my fellow Veterans for Peace. I have to make clear that we Veterans for Peace think that her policies are an abomination to the nation, that they are at cross purposes to the country and not everybody should applaud and give her the idea that she's doing the right thing."
"I knew that Hillary knew, at the beginning of the war, that Hillary knew how things would go. There was a young lady who was working as Hillary Clinton's personal staff chief, when she was a senator in 2002 and 2003, was in a class I taught in DC and I'd ask her to give her boss articles I wrote. And she did give them to her. So I know that. She made a political calculation that she needed to be strong because she was a woman even though she knew from us that the unintended consequences would be catastrophic. She knew all that and made that calculation."
"The height of irony, of course, is that was her tragic flaw that let Obama beat her. She supported the war and Obama didn't. She is the height of hypocrisy. When people die because we have hypocrites at the top of our government, that compels me to make a statement in whatever way I can. It was not the theme of her speech that I was protesting. It was her war policies and support of Mubarak."

When Secretary Clinton walked into the room, the audience rose and applauded before sitting back down. All but Ray McGovern, just as he had done hundreds of times before in the Catholic church without incident. McGovern described what happened next.

"It was my symbolic way of saying not everybody agrees with her. I turned my back to her and stood [silently]. When she came in I not only remained standing but I turned my back to her."

This time things were very different. Ray commented, "I didn't think that would get me roughed up and arrested for disorderly conduct."

Screen grab from the under one minute video below which shows Ray as he is grabbed as Secretary Clinton continued speaking, undaunted, as an assault was taking place.
Ray explained that when he would stand in silent witness at the church, his daughter would be with him keeping an eye on things. This time there was no one to warn him that two large men were approaching him. Nor was there any warning issued by the men, according to McGovern, as they grabbed him and dragged him out of the room.

"They grabbed me and the shock wore off. There was a real struggle. I shouted, 'This is America.' Then I said, 'Who are you?' This is a mystery to me. Who were they? The guy in the suit was the one who did the damage. He was brutal."
"They took me outside, put two sets of iron handcuffs that pierced my wrists. The bleeding went all over my pants. One guy said, "I pricked my finger" like it was his blood."
"I was bleeding in the car so I said 'I think you need to put some gauze on me.' They handed me to the DC police and they told I was being charged with disorderly conduct. I was booked, fingerprinted, mug shot taken. They put me in a little cell -- must be the same size as Bradley Manning's-- about six by four feet."
"It was about three hours that they held me until they let me out. I had to take a cab to the hospital where they x-rayed me, treated me and dressed my wounds. Then the doctors told me that since this was an assault on me, I had to inform the police about who had assaulted me. A little humor helped then."
Image from JusticeOnLine

Four years ago, McGovern attended another speech and made national news. The speaker was Donald Rumsfeld and the talk was being broadcast live on CNN. During the Q&A, McGovern took his turn at the mic and asked the former Secretary of Defense why he had lied about weapons of mass destruction.

Security immediately approached McGovern, but Rumsfeld stopped them choosing instead to attempt to outwit the seasoned analyst. The exchange that ensued led to what Keith Olbermann would later call the "vivisection of Defense Secretary Rumsfeld."
Comparing the two experiences, Ray remarked:

"When Clinton started talking about how people beat up and arrested people in Iran, it gave some poetic justice, a great irony, to my standing there and what happened to me then, when she's talking about what happened in other countries and there I am being handled in a vicious way...God knows what would happen next. Maybe some senior would ask her questions [she doesn't take questions]. As bad as Donald Rumsfeld was, he let me speak. He let me speak and engaged me in dialog."
"At the same [Rumsfeld] speech, there was a courageous guy who stood with his back to Rumsfeld the entire speech. They left him completely alone and he walked out at the end, unbothered. Four years later, things have changed.

In response to the charges of disorderly conduct filed against him, he said, "There was a lot of disorderly conduct, but I wasn't responsible for it."

McGovern says he is not worried about the charges, commenting that "With all those cameras and photos there has to be someone who will come forward with pictures of me and what happened to me to prove I was attacked, I wasn't warned."

He concluded, "I'm sore, but I'm glad I did it." OpEdNews.com writer Cheryl Biren contributed to this report.

Rob Kall is executive editor, publisher and site architect of OpEdNews.com, Host of the Rob Kall Bottom Up Radio Show (WNJC 1360 AM), President of Futurehealth, Inc, more...)