Friday, November 30, 2012

Reuters: U.S.: Boy Scouts allowed to keep sexual abuse files private

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Boy Scouts allowed to keep sexual abuse files private
Dec 1st 2012, 02:26

DALLAS | Fri Nov 30, 2012 9:26pm EST

DALLAS (Reuters) - The Boy Scouts of America has won a temporary reprieve from turning over more than 25 years of confidential files that describe sexual abuse complaints against adult volunteers with one of the country's largest youth organizations.

Attorneys for a teenage boy who says he was assaulted by a former scoutmaster filed suit in San Antonio against the Boy Scouts and are seeking files from 1985 to 2011.

The 4th Texas Court of Appeals issued a stay on Thursday that temporarily halts an August ruling by State District Judge Martha Tanner of San Antonio ordering the Irving, Texas-based Boy Scouts to turn over the "ineligible volunteer" files.

"We will file a response but it is up the Court of Appeals to decide what is going to happen," said Paul Mones, an attorney for the teen.

Mones, of Portland, Oregon, helped obtain the release of the Boy Scouts' "ineligible volunteer" files from 1965 to 1985. Those files, key to a lawsuit that ordered the organization to pay $20 million in damages, were released in October.

The files were kept confidential to protect scouts, Boy Scouts spokesman Deron Smith said.

"We maintain our ineligible volunteer files solely to help our organization remove and keep out individuals deemed to be unfit leaders," he said. "The BSA believes confidentiality of the files helps to encourage prompt reporting of abuse."

(Reporting by Marice Richter; Editing by Daniel Trotta and Lisa Shumaker)

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Reuters: U.S.: Suspect in custody in firebombing of Arizona federal building

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Suspect in custody in firebombing of Arizona federal building
Dec 1st 2012, 02:52

PHOENIX | Fri Nov 30, 2012 9:52pm EST

PHOENIX (Reuters) - A firebomb exploded on Friday outside a federal office building in southern Arizona, causing minor damage and prompting an evacuation of the facility, but no injuries were reported, authorities said.

Police arrested a man suspected of setting off the blast, which occurred at about 8:30 a.m. local time (1530 GMT) behind the Social Security Administration building in downtown Casa Grande, a small city about 50 miles south of Phoenix, a source close to the investigation told Reuters.

The suspect, who faces an array of state and federal charges, was detained after he was pulled over while driving, said the source.

"They caught up to a lone individual on a traffic stop in a car, and he was subsequently taken into custody," said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss details of the case publicly.

The firebomb went off near a rear doorway to the building, and flames from the blast were quickly extinguished, Casa Grande Fire Marshal Barbara Rice said.

She said an unknown number of workers were ordered out of their offices as a precaution, and the building was cordoned off for investigation. No one was hurt, Rice said.

The flammable substance used in the bomb had yet to be determined but could have been gasoline, according to the source. It was not immediately clear how the device was detonated.

Local television news footage of the aftermath showed the frame of the metal security door blackened by the blast and fire.

The FBI was leading a probe of the incident, since it occurred at a federal building, assisted by investigators from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and local law enforcement.

When asked if he could confirm the arrest of a suspect, an FBI spokesman declined to comment.

(Reporting by Tim Gaynor and David Schwartz; Editing by Steve Gorman, Eric Walsh and Lisa Shumaker)

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Reuters: U.S.: Attacker at Wyoming college kills two, commits suicide

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Attacker at Wyoming college kills two, commits suicide
Dec 1st 2012, 01:17

Fri Nov 30, 2012 8:17pm EST

(Reuters) - A man armed with a sharp-edged weapon that some media reports described as a bow and arrow killed two people, including a college faculty member, in Casper, Wyoming, before taking his own life on Friday.

Police said officers were called to Casper College at about 9 a.m. local time to find "multiple victims" of an attack, and the campus was placed under a security lockdown, as were neighboring public schools.

Details released by authorities remained sketchy hours after the incident had ended and the security alert had been lifted.

"There have been three confirmed deaths at two separate crime scenes. One victim is a Casper College faculty member," Casper police said in a statement. "The suspect is also one of the dead and died of apparent suicide."

The statement also said no guns were involved in the crime and that the victims' "injuries were caused by a sharp-edged weapon."

Fire Captain Patrick McJunkin, a city public information officer, declined to elaborate on the nature or circumstances of the violence, except to say a male faculty member was killed on campus and that a female victim was slain off-campus. He also said the assailant knew at least one of his victims.

The Casper Star Tribune reported that the attack on the faculty member and the suspect's suicide both unfolded in a third-floor classroom of the college's physical science center while a class was in session there.

The newspaper also cited campus rumors that the assailant had used a bow and arrow, and it said police believed the off-campus attack had occurred first.

NBC News reported the killer was armed with a "bow-and-arrow-type" weapon, citing the accounts of police, college officials and witnesses. McJunkin declined comment on the bow-and-arrow reports.

Police said the suspected assailant was not currently enrolled at the community college and that the attack did not "appear to be school motivated."

The school, where some 5,000 students are enrolled, said classes were canceled for the day and that counselors were available to students.

Casper is the second-largest city in Wyoming after Cheyenne, the state capital.

(Reporting by Cynthia Johnston; Editing by Steve Gorman and Peter Cooney)

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Reuters: U.S.: Missouri couple wins half of $587 million Powerball lottery

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Missouri couple wins half of $587 million Powerball lottery
Dec 1st 2012, 00:30

(L - R) Cindy Hill talks about winning the record Powerball Lottery as son, Jason, daughter Jaiden husband Mark looks on during a news conference at the North Platte High School in Dearborn, Missouri, November 30, 2012. The Hill family bought one of the two winning tickets for a record $588-million Powerball lottery from the Trex Mart truck stop in Dearborn,Missouri. REUTERS/Dave Kaup

1 of 4. (L - R) Cindy Hill talks about winning the record Powerball Lottery as son, Jason, daughter Jaiden husband Mark looks on during a news conference at the North Platte High School in Dearborn, Missouri, November 30, 2012. The Hill family bought one of the two winning tickets for a record $588-million Powerball lottery from the Trex Mart truck stop in Dearborn,Missouri.

Credit: Reuters/Dave Kaup

By Kevin Murphy

DEARBORN, Missouri | Fri Nov 30, 2012 7:30pm EST

DEARBORN, Missouri (Reuters) - A Missouri couple who won half of a record $587.5 million Powerball jackpot said on Friday they plan to stay put in their rural community, but know their lives will be changed.

"I think we'll have a good Christmas," Cindy Hill said at a news conference where she and her husband, Mark Hill, were presented as winners of the jackpot by the Missouri Lottery.

Cindy Hill, 51, is a former office manager who got laid off in 2010. Mark Hill, 52, was a mechanic for Hillshire Brands, a food company, but has now quit his job.

They have three grown sons and a 6-year-old daughter adopted from China who were among about 25 relatives at the news conference, held in the gymnasium of the high school where they were sweethearts in the 1970s.

Cindy Hill first learned of the winning ticket on Thursday when she checked her numbers at the Trex Mart in Dearborn, a community of about 500 people 30 miles north of Kansas City. She then called Mark Hill from her car. They had bought five tickets.

"I think I'm going to have a heart attack," she told him. He told her to meet him at his mother's house so he could check the numbers for himself. "He said this is the 'Show Me State,' show me."

When they verified the numbers, they traveled to lottery offices in Jefferson City, Missouri, spent the night in a hotel and tried to comprehend what happened, Cindy Hill said.

"I thought ‘This isn't what I thought it would be like, now I'm really nervous," she said. "I'm grateful, but there will be some not-so-good stuff to go along with it." Earlier, she said "You are going to get people coming out of the woodwork and some of them many not be too sane."

She said she and her husband plan to make the most of the winnings by giving to charity, to relatives for college education and other needs, and to the community.

"We are pretty well-grounded and worked hard all our lives," Cindy Hill said.

Mark Hill deferred to his wife for most of the news conference, which was observed by about 300 students from grades 7 to 12 in the bleachers.

"It's all just kind of a fuzz," Mark Hill said.

He said he has not grasped winning the money. On Thursday, for example, he went to buy toothpaste and other items to take to the hotel and found himself checking the price.

A CAMARO AND A HORSE

Cindy Hill said her husband wants a red Chevrolet Camaro car and she wants a horse. Daughter Jaiden wants a pony, Cindy Hill said. They also plan to travel, including a holiday with a lot of relatives in tow, she said.

The Hills won $293,750,000 before taxes. But they will take it in a lump sum of about $193 million rather than the larger amount over 30 years.

The Hills shared the Powerball payout with someone who bought a ticket at a food store in Fountain Hills, Arizona, on the outskirts of Phoenix. The Arizona winner has not yet come forward.

Some states allow lottery winners to remain anonymous but Missouri requires that the winner be publicly identified to claim the prize.

Dearborn reveled in its sudden arrival in the spotlight.

"It was a total surprise," Don Palmer, a customer at the Trex Mart convenience store, said on Thursday. "Nothing ever happens in Dearborn."

The winning numbers were 5, 16, 22, 23, 29, and the Powerball number 6.

The odds of winning the jackpot with a $2 ticket is one in more than 175 million.

(Reporting by Kevin Murphy; Editing by Mary Wisniewski and Mohammad Zargham)

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Reuters: U.S.: High court leaves open if it will take up gay marriage case

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High court leaves open if it will take up gay marriage case
Dec 1st 2012, 00:21

Scott Everhart and Jason Welker hold each other before exchanging wedding vows at a comic book retail shop in Manhattan, New York June 20, 2012. REUTERS/Adrees Latif

Scott Everhart and Jason Welker hold each other before exchanging wedding vows at a comic book retail shop in Manhattan, New York June 20, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Adrees Latif

By Terry Baynes

Fri Nov 30, 2012 7:21pm EST

(Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court's nine justices met in private on Friday to consider whether to enter the legal fray over same-sex marriage but made no announcement about any decision they may have reached.

The high court is considering whether to review five separate challenges to a federal law that prevents married same-sex couples from receiving federal marriage benefits such as Social Security survivor payments and tax exemptions.

It is also considering whether to review California's ban on same-sex marriage, known as Proposition 8, which voters narrowly approved in 2008.

An announcement about whether the court will review the gay marriage cases could come as early as Monday morning.

Thirty-one of the 50 states have passed constitutional amendments banning gay marriage while Washington, D.C., and nine states have legalized it, three of them on Election Day, November 6.

At issue is the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act, or DOMA, which only recognizes marriages between a man and a woman. Gay men and lesbians have challenged a part of the law that prevents them from receiving federal benefits that heterosexual couples receive.

Most courts that have addressed the issue, including federal appeals courts in Boston and New York, have found the law's contested provision violates the equal protection provisions of the U.S. Constitution.

Even in states where same-sex marriage is legal, the couples do not qualify for a host of federal benefits because of DOMA.

If the court takes up the issue and invalidates the law, states could still be free to legalize or deny same-sex marriages on their own terms.

Friday's court conference was one of the Supreme Court's regular weekly sessions at which it considers what new cases to add to the calendar.

The meetings, attended only by the justices, are held in a small conference room adjacent to the chambers of Chief Justice John Roberts.

The justices vote in order of seniority, and while it takes five of the nine for a majority decision in a dispute, it takes only four votes to add a case to the agenda and schedule oral arguments.

If the court does not issue an order on the gay marriage cases on Monday, it could relist the cases for further consideration at its weekly conference next Friday. The justices will sometimes hold particularly complex cases for a future conference if they need more time to figure out what course of action to take.

CALIFORNIA BAN

The court is also considering whether to review a challenge to California's ban on same-sex marriage. The California case, Hollingsworth v. Perry, had sought to establish a constitutional right to marry for gays and lesbians.

The 9th Circuit court in February found the gay marriage ban unconstitutional, but it ruled narrowly in a way that only affected California and not the rest of the country, finding that the state could not take away the right to same-sex marriage after previously allowing it.

No other state that has legalized gay marriage has later banned it.

If the Supreme Court decides to take the case, it could follow the 9th Circuit's decision and also rule narrowly, allowing same-sex marriage only in California but not the rest of the country. Or it could recognize a right to marriage equality.

If the justices decline to take the case, the 9th Circuit's opinion would stand and same-sex marriage would resume in California. That would significantly boost the number of same-sex couples able to marry, given the state's large size.

The Supreme Court on Friday also took no action on an appeal from the state of Arizona which asks the court to revive a state version of DOMA.

The Arizona law, which the 9th Circuit invalidated, eliminated domestic partner healthcare benefits for gay and lesbian state employees. Same-sex couples in Arizona cannot marry under a state constitutional ban passed in 2008.

(Reporting by Terry Baynes in New York; Editing by Howard Goller and Eric Walsh)

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Reuters: U.S.: War on al Qaeda is not indefinite: Pentagon lawyer

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War on al Qaeda is not indefinite: Pentagon lawyer
Nov 30th 2012, 23:13

By David Ingram

WASHINGTON | Fri Nov 30, 2012 6:13pm EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. military campaign against al Qaeda should not be seen as a conflict without end, the Pentagon's chief lawyer said on Friday in a speech that broached a rarely discussed subject among U.S. officials.

The Defense Department's highest-ranking lawyer, Jeh Johnson, predicted al Qaeda would some day be so "effectively destroyed" that the United States would no longer say it is in an armed conflict. A text of his remarks to be given at Oxford University in England was made available to Reuters in advance in Washington.

The U.S. government points to the existence of an armed conflict as the legal underpinning for the indefinite detention of the global militant group's members and allies and for drone strikes in places such as Pakistan.

Johnson's remarks could ignite a global political debate with arguments from both the left and the right.

The speech to the Oxford Union did not forecast when such a moment would arrive because al Qaeda and its affiliates in Yemen and elsewhere remain a danger, he said.

But Johnson tried to frame the discussion with what he called conventional legal principles rather than a new legal structure emerging from the September 11 attacks.

"Now that efforts by the U.S. military against al Qaeda are in their 12th year, we must also ask ourselves: How will this conflict end?" said Johnson, an appointee of U.S. President Barack Obama.

Johnson delivered the remarks in Oxford as prepared, a spokesman said.

Johnson has been mentioned as a possible U.S. attorney general to succeed Eric Holder in Obama's second term. A former New York corporate lawyer and federal prosecutor, he has been at the center of internal administration debates on national security since he arrived at the Pentagon as general counsel in 2009.

An "open end" to the conflict has been a defining feature of what then-President George W. Bush called a war on terror beginning with the September 11 attacks that destroyed New York's World Trade Center, damaged the Pentagon and killed 3,000 people.

Three days after the attacks, Congress authorized force against all "nations, organizations or persons" who planned them or who aided the planners.

'TIPPING POINT'

In courtrooms, congressional hearings and executive orders, U.S. officials with rare exceptions speak of a conflict with no obvious end point.

"I think one day they will be defeated, but it's not going to happen any time soon," Senator Lindsey Graham, a Republican, told The Huffington Post website this week.

U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, Johnson's boss, said in a November 20 speech that U.S. forces had decimated al Qaeda's core and made progress in Yemen and Somalia, but needed to avert militant gains in Mali and Nigeria.

On Thursday, Panetta said al Qaeda fighters are still trying to make inroads in Afghanistan, which was the group's primary base of operations in 2001.

By asking how the conflict would end, Johnson could provoke a public conversation that gets more specific.

"There will come a tipping point," he said in the speech, "a tipping point at which so many of the leaders and operatives of al Qaeda and its affiliates have been killed or captured, and the group is no longer able to attempt or launch a strategic attack against the United States," that al Qaeda will be "effectively destroyed."

"At that point, we must be able to say to ourselves that our efforts should no longer be considered an 'armed conflict' against al Qaeda and its associated forces."

Under that scenario, law enforcement and intelligence agents would go on pursuing individual militants or groups - even those who are inspired by al Qaeda's ideology - with the military in a reserve role.

"'War' must be regarded as a finite, extraordinary and unnatural state of affairs," Johnson said. "We must not accept the current conflict, and all that it entails, as the 'new normal.' Peace must be regarded as the norm toward which the human race continually strives."

But what to do with detainees not charged with crimes - such as some of those held at the Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base in Cuba - might still be a slow process, Johnson said.

In one of 25 footnotes to the written remarks, Johnson cited a U.S. Supreme Court ruling from 1948 that allowed the detention of German nationals for six years after fighting with Germany ended.

Johnson is the first Obama administration official to say clearly that ideological kinship alone is not enough to make someone part of the armed conflict, said Karen Greenberg, director of the Center on National Security at Fordham University in New York.

"You cannot just have the ideas associated with al Qaeda and be considered part of al Qaeda. It has to be an organizational tie."

The speech shows the administration could move in a new direction after Obama was reelected on November 6, she said.

The timing "has everything to do with the election and maybe we'll see some real headway in terms of ending this war, ending this emergency state," she said.

Johnson was both optimistic and legally correct in saying the conflict would eventually end, said William Banks, a Syracuse University law professor

"It has not been said in this decade-plus since 9/11, that we might be looking at that posture of a state of peace as the default," he said.

(Editing by Howard Goller, Bill Trott and Andre Grenon)

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Reuters: U.S.: Soldier in WikiLeaks case plays down suicide comment

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Soldier in WikiLeaks case plays down suicide comment
Nov 30th 2012, 18:46

Army Private First Class Bradley Manning (C) is escorted in handcuffs as he leaves the courthouse in Fort Meade, Maryland June 6, 2012. REUTERS/Jose Luis Magana

Army Private First Class Bradley Manning (C) is escorted in handcuffs as he leaves the courthouse in Fort Meade, Maryland June 6, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Jose Luis Magana

By Medina Roshan

FORT MEADE, Maryland | Fri Nov 30, 2012 1:46pm EST

FORT MEADE, Maryland (Reuters) - The U.S. Army private accused of orchestrating a massive leak of classified documents to the WikiLeaks website said on Friday he may have been sarcastic in indicating he had suicidal thoughts when he first arrived at a U.S. detention center.

Bradley Manning is in his second day of testimony in a pre-trial hearing to determine whether he should face a court-martial on suspicion of leaking thousands of classified military reports, diplomatic cables and other documents.

A prosecutor asked why he had stated on arrival at Quantico, Virginia, in July 2010 that he was "always planning, never acting" about being suicidal. "I did say it might have been sort of a sarcastic answer, given just on a whim," Manning said. "I knew I was going to be placed on a suicide risk status. It didn't really make a difference what answer I gave."

Manning, who testified on Thursday that his early days in detention in May 2010 in Kuwait were spent in a cramped "cage" where he thought he would die, was placed on suicide watch on arrival at Quantico. He lived in solitary confinement for up to 23 hours a day with a guard checking on him every few minutes.

Manning faces up to life in prison if convicted of charges he played a role in the leaking of secrets by WikiLeaks, which stunned governments around the world by publishing intelligence documents and diplomatic cables, mostly in 2010.

Manning's lawyers were working with the court on the language of a proposed plea involving less serious charges. At present, a prison term of at least 16 years is under discussion, one of his attorneys said, but until a plea is formally entered and accepted, the length of any prison term is uncertain.

Manning's testimony on Thursday marked his first public comments since his arrest in Iraq in May 2010. His cross-examination on Friday came on the fourth day of a hearing at Fort Meade to determine whether his case should proceed to a full court-martial.

LINKS TO WIKILEAKS

Charges include stealing records belonging to the United States and wrongfully causing them to be published on the Internet and aiding enemies of the United States, identified by prosecutors as al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, an affiliate of the militant network founded by the late Osama bin Laden.

Prosecutors have alleged that Manning, without authorization while on intelligence duty, disclosed hundreds of thousands of U.S. diplomatic cables, military reports and video of a military helicopter attack in Iraq in which two Reuters journalists were killed.

WikiLeaks has never confirmed Manning was the source of any documents it released.

In pre-trial litigation, prosecutors have presented testimony legal experts say could be used to build a case that Manning had been in email contact with Julian Assange, WikiLeaks' Australian-born founder.

Assange has spent nearly six months in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London, where he sought refuge to avoid extradition to Sweden for questioning in a sexual molestation case.

Assange and his supporters have said the Swedish case against him could be part of a secret plot to have him sent to the United States for trial and either executed or imprisoned at the U.S. detention facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

U.S. officials have denied those assertions but have acknowledged a federal grand jury in Alexandria, Virginia, has been collecting evidence about WikiLeaks. U.S. officials have not ruled out criminal charges against Assange.

(Writing by Dan Burns; Editing by Bill Trott)

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Reuters: U.S.: Three people killed in attack at Wyoming college: report

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Three people killed in attack at Wyoming college: report
Nov 30th 2012, 19:05

Fri Nov 30, 2012 1:22pm EST

(Reuters) - A gunman shot dead at least one person at a community college in Wyoming on Friday, prompting a lockdown at the school as police secured the scene, and at least one other person was wounded, the Casper Star Tribune reported.

It quoted a spokesman for Casper College as saying the gunman was "possibly deceased," and said the city's police chief had cited multiple injuries. The school said on its website it had issued an emergency alert and advised against travel to the campus until further notice.

School and police officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment via phone and email.

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Reuters: U.S.: House votes to expand visas for high-tech foreign workers

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House votes to expand visas for high-tech foreign workers
Nov 30th 2012, 19:22

WASHINGTON | Fri Nov 30, 2012 1:36pm EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A bill to create a permanent visa program for foreigners with advanced science and technical degrees cleared the House of Representatives on Friday, the latest salvo in the broader fight over U.S. immigration reform.

The Republican-backed measure would reserve 55,000 permanent residence visas for foreign graduates of U.S. universities with master's and doctoral degrees in the "STEM" disciplines of science, technology, engineering and math.

Many Democrats including President Barack Obama oppose the bill because it would eliminate an existing program, often called the green card lottery, which provides visas to people from countries with low rates of immigration to the United States.

The bill passed 245-139 in the Republican-controlled House, largely along party lines. But Democrats control the Senate, and a similar bill there has little chance of passing this year.

Texas Republican Representative Lamar Smith, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee who introduced the "STEM Jobs Act," said the high-tech visa program would help the United States retain U.S.-trained workers to spur innovation and job creation.

"In a global economy, we cannot afford to educate these foreign graduates in the U.S. and then send them back home to work for our competitors," Smith said.

Democrats argued that the bill unfairly pits lower-skilled immigrants against those with more education and qualifications in the battle for visas.

"Talk about picking winners and losers," said Representative Luis Gutierrez, an Illinois Democrat who chairs the Immigration Task Force of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus.

"There was no special line for PhD's and master's degree holders at Ellis Island. There was no asterisk on the Statue of Liberty that said your IQ must be this high to enter."

Democrats, emboldened by strong support from Hispanics and other minorities in the November 6 election, are pushing for comprehensive immigration reform legislation.

(Reporting by Alina Selyukh and Richard Cowan; Editing by Xavier Briand)

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Reuters: U.S.: Missouri couple wins half of record Powerball lottery jackpot

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Missouri couple wins half of record Powerball lottery jackpot
Nov 30th 2012, 18:13

By Kevin Murphy

DEARBORN, Mo | Fri Nov 30, 2012 12:27pm EST

DEARBORN, Mo (Reuters) - A Missouri couple, Mark and Cindy Hill, were identified by lottery officials on Friday as winners of half the record $587.5 million Powerball jackpot.

Cindy Hill first learned she was a winner on Thursday when she checked her numbers from a ticket she bought at a local Trex Mart gas station and convenience store about 30 miles north of Kansas City, according to a statement by Missouri Lottery on Friday.

The drawing was held late on Wednesday.

"I called my husband and told him, 'I think I am having a heart attack,'" Hill, 51, said, according to the release. "I think we just won the lottery!"

They shared the Powerball payout with someone who bought a ticket at a food store in Fountain Hills, Arizona, on the outskirts of Phoenix. The Arizona winner has not yet come forward.

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Reuters: U.S.: High winds, heavy rain to batter California through the weekend

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High winds, heavy rain to batter California through the weekend
Nov 30th 2012, 18:17

By Mary Slosson

SACRAMENTO | Fri Nov 30, 2012 1:17pm EST

SACRAMENTO (Reuters) - Heavy rain and winds of up to 80 miles per hour were forecast in California's mountain and coastal regions when a storm rolls through the U.S. West Coast this weekend, prompting warnings of mud flows and flooding.

High wind advisories were issued for Northern and Central California, and transportation officials warned against campers and trailers crossing bridges, including San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge.

"Meteorologists tell us the storm system is 'rapidly evolving' and that it will be extremely wet the next several days," Mark Ghilarducci, Secretary of the California Emergency Management Agency, said in a statement.

Parts of California could receive up to 14 inches of rain, officials said, adding that the extreme weather was likely to cause mud and debris flows in some areas of Butte, Plumas, and Shasta counties.

Emergency officials also warned of possible power outages.

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Reuters: U.S.: Pentagon, Lockheed agree on new lot of F-35s

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Pentagon, Lockheed agree on new lot of F-35s
Nov 30th 2012, 17:12

A F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter is seen at the Naval Air Station (NAS) Patuxent River, Maryland January 20, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Yuri Gripas

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Reuters: U.S.: Billionaire Taubman sexually harassed flight attendant: lawsuit

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Billionaire Taubman sexually harassed flight attendant: lawsuit
Nov 30th 2012, 16:15

Fri Nov 30, 2012 11:15am EST

(Reuters) - Octogenarian billionaire mall developer A. Alfred Taubman has been sued for $29 million by a Michigan flight attendant who claimed he sexually harassed her numerous times aboard his private plane.

In a complaint filed Thursday with the federal court in Detroit, Nicole Rock accused her former boss, 88, of a variety of improper conduct in the roughly six years she worked for the married father of three.

Rock said this included grabbing her or brushing against her on multiple occasions, forcing his tongue into her ear and mouth repeatedly, tearing buttons off her blouse, and once trying to perform oral sex on her. She also said Taubman urged her to have an abortion after learning that she had become pregnant.

According to the complaint, Rock was awarded disability leave in February 2011 because of the "extreme stress, anxiety, fearfulness and depression" she experienced as a result of her work conditions. She left Taubman's employ for good that month.

"The allegations contained in the complaint filed in court against A. Alfred Taubman are not true," Taubman's office said in a statement. "Mr. Taubman will address the complaint through the appropriate legal channels."

Thomas Warnicke, a lawyer for Rock, was not immediately available for comment on Friday.

The $29 million is 1 percent of Taubman's net worth of $2.9 billion, as estimated by Forbes magazine in September.

Taubman lives in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, and started the mall empire Taubman Centers Inc in 1950. He is also a prominent philanthropist.

In 2002 and 2003 he served roughly nine months in prison over an art auction price-fixing scandal at Sotheby's, which he bought in 1983. He no longer has a controlling stake.

The case is Rock v. Taubman et al, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Michigan, No. 12-15244.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Matthew Lewis)

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Reuters: U.S.: Boeing engineers union likely to back mediation in stalled talks

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Boeing engineers union likely to back mediation in stalled talks
Nov 30th 2012, 14:58

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A Boeing 787 sits on the assembly line at the company's operations in Everett, Washington, October 18, 2012. REUTERS/Andy Clark

A Boeing 787 sits on the assembly line at the company's operations in Everett, Washington, October 18, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Andy Clark

Fri Nov 30, 2012 9:58am EST

(Reuters) - The union that represents Boeing Co engineers is likely to agree to mediated talks in a bid to resolve the standoff with the planemaker, the executive director of the union said on Friday.

On Thursday, Boeing asked for U.S. mediators to help resolve talks with the Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace (SPEEA) union, which represents its 23,000 engineers, saying the sides were far apart on pay and benefits.

That move halted labor discussions around midday Thursday in Seattle, and no further meetings were scheduled, the two sides said. Union contracts with Boeing expired Sunday.

"We will almost certainly agree to some type of mediation, but we find the company's position confusing," Ray Goforth, SPEEA executive director, said in an email to Reuters.

Goforth said Chicago-based Boeing had not responded to many union proposals and that a lot work was left to do.

"We view this action on their part as a stunt to distract people from the proposed pay and benefit cuts," Goforth added.

The union has balked at a Boeing contract that it says would cut the growth rate of compensation of professional and technical employees. Boeing says its latest offer is much improved over its initial proposal and reflects a tough competitive environment.

Shares of Boeing were up 0.6 percent at $74.56 in early trading.

(Reporting by Alwyn Scott in New York and Karen Jacobs in Atlanta; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

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Reuters: U.S.: NJ rail bridge collapse causes derailment, chemical leak: police

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NJ rail bridge collapse causes derailment, chemical leak: police
Nov 30th 2012, 14:21

Fri Nov 30, 2012 9:21am EST

(Reuters) - A rail bridge over a creek in southern New Jersey caused a Conrail freight train to derail, spilling hazardous chemicals at the scene, police said on Friday.

The incident occurred in Paulsboro, New Jersey, at a crossing near the Delaware River, police said. Paulsboro is just over the river from Philadelphia.

Additional details were not immediately available.

Television images of the scene on CNN showed several cars partly submerged in the creek.

(Reporting by Edith Honan and Ellen Wulfhorst; Writing by Dan Burns; Editing by James Dalgleish)

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Reuters: U.S.: U.S. top court to consider whether to review gay marriage cases

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U.S. top court to consider whether to review gay marriage cases
Nov 30th 2012, 06:05

Scott Everhart and Jason Welker hold each other before exchanging wedding vows at a comic book retail shop in Manhattan, New York June 20, 2012. REUTERS/Adrees Latif

Scott Everhart and Jason Welker hold each other before exchanging wedding vows at a comic book retail shop in Manhattan, New York June 20, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Adrees Latif

By Terry Baynes

Fri Nov 30, 2012 1:05am EST

(Reuters) - The nine justices of the U.S. Supreme Court are widely expected to decide in a private meeting on Friday to enter the legal fray raging over same-sex marriage.

An announcement to take a case could come as early as Friday afternoon or Monday morning.

Thirty-one of the 50 states have passed constitutional amendments banning gay marriage while Washington, D.C., and nine other states have legalized it, three of them on Election Day, November 6.

At issue is the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act, or DOMA, passed by Congress, which only recognizes marriages between a man and a woman. Gay men and lesbians have specifically challenged a part of the law that prevents them from receiving federal benefits that heterosexual couples receive.

The high court is considering requests to review five cases that challenge the law as a violation of the equal protection provisions of the U.S. Constitution.

Most courts to address the issue, including federal appeals courts in Boston and New York, have found the law's contested provision unconstitutional.

The Supreme Court is expected to take at least one of the challenges, as the court typically reviews lower-court decisions that invalidate a federal law.

Even in states where same-sex marriage is legal, the couples do not qualify for a host of federal benefits because of DOMA.

If the court accepts one of the cases, the oral arguments will likely take place in early 2013, with a ruling expected by the end of the court term in June.

If the court invalidates the law, states could still be free to legalize or deny same-sex marriages on their own terms.

Friday's scheduled court conference is one of the Supreme Court's regular weekly sessions at which it considers what new cases to add to the calendar.

The meetings, attended only by the justices, are held in a small conference room adjacent to the chambers of Chief Justice John Roberts.

The justices vote in order of seniority, and while it takes five of the nine for a majority decision in a dispute, it takes only four votes to add a case to the agenda and schedule oral arguments.

CALIFORNIA'S BAN

The court is also considering whether to review a challenge to California's ban on same-sex marriage, known as Proposition 8, which voters narrowly approved in 2008. The California case, Hollingsworth v. Perry, had sought to establish a constitutional right to marry for gays and lesbians.

The 9th Circuit in February found the gay marriage ban unconstitutional, but it ruled narrowly in a way that only affected California and not the rest of the country, finding that the state could not take away the right to same-sex marriage after previously allowing it. No other state to legalize gay marriage has later banned it.

If the Supreme Court later takes the case, it could follow the 9th Circuit's decision and also rule narrowly, requiring same-sex marriage only in California but not the rest of the country. Or it could recognize a right to marriage equality.

If the justices decline to take the case, the 9th Circuit's opinion would stand, and same-sex marriage would resume in California. That would significantly boost the number of same-sex couples able to marry, given the state's large size.

The Supreme Court is also considering an appeal from the state of Arizona, asking the court to revive a state version of DOMA. The Arizona law, which the 9th Circuit invalidated, eliminated domestic partner healthcare benefits for gay and lesbian state employees. Same-sex couples in Arizona cannot marry, under that state's constitutional ban passed in 2008.

(Reporting by Terry Baynes in New York; Editing by Howard Goller and Cynthia Osterman)

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