Friday, May 31, 2013

Reuters: U.S.: Man in California dog mauling murder case held on more than $1 million bail

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Man in California dog mauling murder case held on more than $1 million bail
May 31st 2013, 21:34

By Dana Feldman

LANCASTER, California | Fri May 31, 2013 5:34pm EDT

LANCASTER, California (Reuters) - A Southern California dog-owner arrested after four pit bulls attacked and killed a woman near her home was ordered held on $1.05 million bail on Friday after being charged with second-degree murder.

Alex Donald Jackson, 29, was charged on Thursday in what legal experts said was an unusual instance of prosecutors accusing a dog owner of murder in a fatal mauling, especially when the owner may not have been present during the attack.

Jackson was arrested a day after the May 9 incident in the high desert community of Littlerock after Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies searching for the dogs said they found a marijuana "grow operation" at his home.

Six pit bulls and two mixed breed dogs were seized from Jackson's house. Some were found with blood on their coats and muzzles that authorities said forensic DNA tests linked to the victim, 63-year-old Pamela Maria Devitt.

Jackson did not enter a plea on Friday at a hearing in Los Angeles Superior Court of Antelope Valley, during which Judge Steven Odgen set his bail.

According to the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, Devitt had been walking or jogging when pit bulls attacked her on a roadside in the community, about 65 miles east of Los Angeles. Devitt died in an ambulance of blood loss after suffering 150 to 200 puncture wounds.

Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney Samantha Macdonald said that since January authorities had received at least three other reports of Jackson's pit bulls attacking people. He faces a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted.

"We're just going to try to prosecute to the fullest extent of the law," Macdonald told reporters after Friday's hearing. "Our theory is implied malice."

Stan Goldman, a criminal law professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, said it was rare for the state to seek a murder conviction against a dog owner and that such cases were more often prosecuted as involuntary manslaughter or gross negligence.

Jackson's lawyer, Robert Chu, left court on Friday without speaking with reporters.

In 2001, Diane Whipple, a 33-year-old collegiate lacrosse player and coach, was fatally mauled by two Presa Canarios, a dog breed that can grow as large as 130 lbs (60 kg), in a hallway outside her San Francisco apartment.

The dog's owners, a married couple who lived in the same apartment building, were convicted of involuntary manslaughter and the wife was found guilty of second-degree murder.

(Writing by Cynthia Johnston; Editing by Toni Reinhold)

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Reuters: U.S.: Federal judge lifts ban on public access to Medicare data

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Federal judge lifts ban on public access to Medicare data
May 31st 2013, 22:58

By Maurice Tamman

Fri May 31, 2013 6:39pm EDT

(Reuters) - A U.S. federal judge lifted a 33-year-old injunction barring public access to a confidential database of Medicare insurance claims, a decision that could lead to greater scrutiny of how physicians treat patients and charge for their services.

Judge Marcia Morales Howard ruled in favor of a motion by Dow Jones, the publisher of the Wall Street Journal, that the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida lift an injunction imposed in 1979.

The American Medical Association had fought lifting the ban, arguing that disclosure of the information would violate physicians' right to privacy. Doctors had successfully made the same argument in 1979, when a judge ruled the release of such information would violate the 1974 Privacy Act.

Dow Jones went to court in January 2011, attempting to overturn the injunction after a series of stories in the Journal found tens of millions of dollars in fraud and other abuse by doctors and other Medicare providers. The Journal's work, however, was restricted by limitations placed on the data released by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which rendered anonymous all information pertaining to individual Medicare providers. That meant reporters weren't allowed to name individual doctors who the Journal identified solely through using the data.

In her ruling, Judge Howard said that because of judicial rulings in privacy cases in the years since the 1979 injunction, the ban was based "upon a legal principle that can no longer be sustained."

Officials at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services couldn't be reached for comment. The American Medical Association didn't respond immediately to a request for comment. A Dow Jones spokeswoman declined to comment.

When the suit was filed, the Journal's editor-in-chief at the time, Robert Thomson, said: "The Medicare system is funded by taxpayers, and yet taxpayers are blocked from seeing how their money is spent. It is in the interest of law-abiding practitioners that those who are gaming the system are exposed."

Dow Jones is a unit of News Corp.

(Edited by Michael Williams)

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Reuters: U.S.: Obama pushes to hold down student loan interest rates

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Obama pushes to hold down student loan interest rates
May 31st 2013, 22:49

Students listen as U.S. President Barack Obama makes remarks on student loans from the White House in Washington May 31, 2013. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

1 of 2. Students listen as U.S. President Barack Obama makes remarks on student loans from the White House in Washington May 31, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

By Elvina Nawaguna

WASHINGTON | Fri May 31, 2013 2:48pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama on Friday pushed his plan to tie federal student loan interest rates to the market, and criticized a Republican plan passed by the House of Representatives that he said would cost borrowers more.

The mounting burden of student loan debt, now pegged at more than $1 trillion, with an average borrower owing $27,000, is seen as a drag on the economy and a barrier to people getting educations needed for better jobs.

Currently students pay the same fixed rate for federal student loans, set by the government at 3.4 percent, regardless of changes in other interest rates in the economy. If Congress does nothing, those rates are scheduled to rise to 6.8 percent on July 1.

"Higher education cannot be a luxury for a privileged few. It is an economic necessity that every family should be able to afford, every young person with dreams and ambitions should be able to access," Obama, flanked by college students, said at an event in the White House Rose Garden.

In Obama's plan, rates for subsidized federal student loans would be set every year based on the market plus 0.93 percent, but remain fixed for the life of the loan. His plan, for instance, would lock in rates for next year's borrowers at 2.9 percent for the life of the loan.

He also would fully fund the Pell Grant program that helps low-income students, expand work-study programs and include an income-based repayment option.

Students who take out private student loans face more stringent repayment terms, making government-backed options a more attractive alternative.

But Obama's plan eliminates a cap on interest rates, which critics say puts students at risk of paying higher rates on government student loans in the future.

The Republican plan, passed by the House last week, requires rates for subsidized and unsubsidized loans, known as Stafford loans, to be recalculated every year and pegged to 10-year Treasury notes, plus 2.5 percentage points. The plan caps interest rates for the loans at 8.5 percent.

VETO THREAT

Under that plan, a student who borrows the maximum amount of subsidized and unsubsidized Stafford loans over five years would pay $14,430 in interest, according to the non-partisan Congressional Research Service. If rates double on July 1, a student would pay $12,598, compared with $7,965 at current rates.

"It could actually cost a freshman starting school this fall more over the next four years than if we did nothing at all and let the interest rates double on July 1st," Obama said. "The House bill isn't smart and it's unfair," he said.

The White House last week threatened to veto the House version of the bill. Democrats who control the Senate want to extend the current lower rates for another two years while they work on a more comprehensive long-term rate system.

Republicans including as House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio and House Education and the Workforce Committee Chairman John Kline of Minnesota accused the president of politicizing the student loan issue, rather than ironing out the differences between the two plans.

"With time so short and the differences between our proposals so slight, today's event was misguided and deeply disappointing," Boehner said.

The Institute for College Access and Success (TICAS) opposes both plans, saying such market-based options could force borrowers to pay more later or turn to riskier private student loans at time when young people still face a tight job market amid a tough economy.

"Students and families need the assurance that federal student loans will remain affordable," TICAS president Lauren Asher told Reuters.

(Reporting by Elvina Nawaguna; Editing by Susan Heavey and Vicki allen)

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Reuters: U.S.: Five sets of skeletal remains found in Arizona desert

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Five sets of skeletal remains found in Arizona desert
May 31st 2013, 23:49

PHOENIX | Fri May 31, 2013 7:49pm EDT

PHOENIX (Reuters) - Five sets of skeletal human remains have been discovered hidden in unusual circumstances in Arizona's remote desert in an area used as a smuggling corridor with Mexico, and investigating authorities said on Friday they have not ruled out foul play.

The Pima County Medical Examiner said U.S. Border Patrol agents discovered the remains, partially covered by rocks, on Tuesday near the town of Sells on the Tohono O'Odham Reservation, about 130 miles south of Phoenix.

"It's not a typical migrant death site. Usually that's people laying under a tree because it got too hot, and they're on the surface of the ground and nobody tried to bury them," Chief Medical Examiner Gregory Hess told Reuters.

"The remains were partially covered with rocks and we're not sure if that's an attempt to hide (them) or if somebody just buried them there for some other reason ... or whether or not that indicates foul play or what's going on,"

The Tohono O'Odham Police Department, which is the leading the investigation, did not immediately return a call seeking comment. The Tucson sector Border Patrol confirmed the discovery but declined further comment.

Arizona straddles a well trafficked corridor for human and drug smugglers from Mexico. While border crossers' deaths are common, mostly caused by heat exposure in the summer months, the circumstances in which these remains were found were not typical of border crosser fatalities, Hess said.

He said he had not yet determined the gender or age of the remains or cause of death, but added that autopsies would be carried out next week.

(Reporting by Tim Gaynor; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Tim Dobbyn)

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Reuters: U.S.: NATO to hold 2014 summit on Afghanistan troop withdrawal

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NATO to hold 2014 summit on Afghanistan troop withdrawal
May 31st 2013, 17:24

WASHINGTON | Fri May 31, 2013 12:11pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States and NATO plan to hold a summit meeting in 2014 to discuss troop withdrawals from Afghanistan, President Barack Obama said on Friday after a meeting with the alliance's head, Anders Fogh Rasmussen.

Obama said that Afghanistan was the main topic of talks between the two. Rasmussen said combat troops would be home by the end of 2014 but that NATO will prepare a training mission for 2015 with a smaller number of troops.

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Reuters: U.S.: Sen. Wyden warns gene-altered wheat could become trade problem

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Sen. Wyden warns gene-altered wheat could become trade problem
May 31st 2013, 18:35

WASHINGTON | Fri May 31, 2013 2:35pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Agriculture Department must work with other agencies to ensure that the discovery of unapproved genetically engineered wheat in Oregon does not become an unfair barrier to trade, one of the state's U.S. Senators said on Friday.

"The discovery of non-harvested, GE (genetically engineered) wheat should not be used by America's trading partners to erect spurious, protectionist trade barriers ... in the absence of scientific evidence indicating that Oregon exports contain this strain of wheat," Sen. Roy Wyden, a Democrat, wrote to USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack.

USDA could "co-ordinate closely" with the U.S. Trade Representative and the Department of State, among others, to "provide assurance and certainly to global wheat markets," Wyden said.

(Reporting by Ros Krasny; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick)

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Reuters: U.S.: U.S. Medicare outlook improves, Social Security outlook unchanged

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U.S. Medicare outlook improves, Social Security outlook unchanged
May 31st 2013, 17:22

WASHINGTON | Fri May 31, 2013 11:19am EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The budget outlook for the U.S. government's Social Security pension program is largely unchanged while the outlook for its healthcare program for the elderly has improved slightly because of lower hospital and nursing costs, the programs' trustees said on Friday.

Nonetheless, the Social Security and Medicare Board of Trustees said that neither program can meet projected long-term obligations without changes from Congress, urging action as soon as possible.

The trustees said the Social Security fund for retirees will become insolvent in 2033, the same year as a projection made last year.

The main trust fund that supports the Medicare healthcare program for the elderly will run out of money in 2026, two years later than projections made last year.

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Reuters: U.S.: Court allows rule designed to find bulk rifle sales

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Court allows rule designed to find bulk rifle sales
May 31st 2013, 17:46

U.S. President Barack Obama walks on the South Lawn of the White House upon his return to Washington from Chicago May 30, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Yuri Gripas

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Reuters: U.S.: California appeals court upholds moratorium on executions

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California appeals court upholds moratorium on executions
May 31st 2013, 06:02

By Ronnie Cohen

SAN FRANCISCO | Fri May 31, 2013 2:02am EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A California appeals court upheld a judge's ruling on Thursday prohibiting the state from executing condemned inmates until it adopts a new lethal-injection protocol, in the latest judicial move against capital punishment in the state.

California has 736 inmates on death row but has not executed anyone in seven years.

A federal judge imposed a moratorium on executions there in 2006, ruling that the most populous U.S. state's use of a lethal three-drug cocktail amounted to cruel and unusual punishment.

Since then, corrections officials have tried to fix deficiencies in the injection procedure, but a state trial court last year imposed its own separate moratorium on executions after deeming the process "a substantial failure."

Thursday's California 1st Appellate District ruling came in a challenge by condemned murderer Mitchell Sims, who sued in 2010 arguing that one of three drugs to be used for executions was unnecessary and would cause excruciating pain.

Sims' attorneys also alleged the state failed to follow procedures in formulating its latest combination of drugs to be used in the lethal cocktail.

Superior Court Judge Faye D'Opal of Marin County, the site of San Quentin State Prison's death row, last year ordered a moratorium on killing inmates by lethal injection until the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) enacted new regulations in compliance with state rules.

A three-judge appeals court panel upheld D'Opal's decision.

State corrections department spokesman Jeffrey Callison said his agency had received the ruling and was reviewing it. He declined further comment.

The cocktail of drugs used in state executions contains the anesthetic sodium pentothal, muscle paralyzer pancuronium bromide and heart-stopper potassium chloride.

State officials now must decide whether to revise the rules regarding lethal injections or appeal Thursday's ruling to the California Supreme Court.

D'Opal found that the state failed to sufficiently explore alternatives to the three-drug combination and failed to explain why a single drug would not be as effective.

Clarence Ray Allen was the last inmate to be executed in California in January 2006.

(Editing by Alex Dobuzinskis, John Stonestreet)

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Reuters: U.S.: Boston rockers play fundraiser for bomb victims

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Boston rockers play fundraiser for bomb victims
May 31st 2013, 04:56

Singer Joey McIntyre performs during the Boston Strong benefit concert at the Boston TD Garden in Boston, May 30, 2013. REUTERS/Gretchen Ertl

Singer Joey McIntyre performs during the Boston Strong benefit concert at the Boston TD Garden in Boston, May 30, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Gretchen Ertl

By Richard Valdmanis

BOSTON | Fri May 31, 2013 12:56am EDT

BOSTON (Reuters) - A succession of all-star bands from Aerosmith to Jimmy Buffet rocked a packed house at Boston's TD Garden on Thursday night in a mostly raucous fund-raiser for the victims of last month's marathon bombing.

Tickets priced between $35 and $285 sold out fast at the 17,500-seat venue, with net proceeds to be donated to The One Fund, a reserve established by Boston Mayor Thomas Menino and Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick that has so far received more than $37 million in donations to compensate victims of the April 15 bombing.

The music kicked off with a Jimi Hendrix-style distortion guitar version of the U.S. national anthem by rock band Boston that drew cheering fans out of their seats before lead singer Tommy DeCarlo told the crowd "Tonight we are all Boston."

Another Massachusetts band, Extreme, transformed the energy with a sing-along version of "More Than Words" - an acoustic love song - before the homegrown J. Geils Band unleashed a torrent of fast-paced R&B as lead man Peter Wolf strutted the stage in black leather and shades.

"We came up here to help out Boston, but also because these are some great bands," said Shelly Watson, who drove up from Rhode Island with her husband to see the show, which also included comedians and a short speech by Victoria McGrath, a young girl who was injured in the bombing.

Other acts included country star Jason Aldean, who despite not being from Massachusetts admitted to being a fan of the Boston Red Sox baseball team, New Kids on the Block, James Taylor and Aerosmith - which made a round-the-world detour from Singapore to make the show.

Donnie Wahlberg from New Kids on the Block won the decibel award when he took the microphone and yelled the word Boston repeatedly, drawing enthusiastic shrieks from the audience.

"We came here tonight to show the world how resilient we are," he said.

Fellow band mate Joey McIntyre displayed the marathon medal he earned on the day of the explosion before the group broke into a run of songs including "I'll Be Loving You" and "Step By Step."

Aerosmith closed the show with a bang with lead man Steven Tyler sporting an ankle-length cape and leopard-pattern shirt dancing with his microphone stand while singing rousing versions of "Sweet Emotion" and "Living on the Edge."

"How heavy does your heart feel after a night like this?" he asked the cheering crowd.

Concert organizers have declined to say yet how much money the concert will raise for The One Fund, but have said bands and venue employees were working for free.

Three people were killed and 264 injured, many losing their legs, by homemade pressure-cooker bombs that exploded at the finish line of the world-renowned Boston Marathon on April 15.

Kenneth Feinberg, a lawyer who specializes in mediation, was tapped by Menino and Patrick to run The One Fund. Feinberg has warned victims to lower their expectations of how much money the fund would be able to pay individual beneficiaries.

Boston bomb suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, an ethnic Chechen with roots in Russia's volatile northern Caucasus, was captured in a dramatic police manhunt days after the bombing. He was criminally charged and is being held in jail.

His brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, was also identified by the FBI as a suspect but he was killed in a gunfight with police. U.S. security officials have said they believe the brothers had Islamic militant sympathies.

(Reporting by Richard Valdmanis; Editing by Scott Malone, Grant McCool, Eric Beech and Lisa Shumaker)

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Reuters: U.S.: Cyber threats pose 'stealthy, insidious' danger - defense chief

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Cyber threats pose 'stealthy, insidious' danger - defense chief
May 31st 2013, 05:13

U.S. Marine Sergeant Michael Kidd works on a computer at ECPI University in Virginia Beach, Virginia, February 7, 2012. REUTERS/Samantha Sais

U.S. Marine Sergeant Michael Kidd works on a computer at ECPI University in Virginia Beach, Virginia, February 7, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Samantha Sais

By David Alexander

ABOARD A U.S. MILITARY AIRCRAFT | Fri May 31, 2013 1:13am EDT

ABOARD A U.S. MILITARY AIRCRAFT (Reuters) - Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said on Friday that cyber threats posed a "quiet, stealthy, insidious" danger to the United States and other nations, and called for "rules of the road" to guide behavior and avoid conflict on global computer networks.

Hagel said he would address cyber security in his speech on Saturday to the Shangri-La Security Dialogue in Singapore and the issue was likely to come up in a brief meeting with Chinese delegates on the margins of the conference.

"Cyber threats are real, they're terribly dangerous," Hagel told reporters on his plane en route to the gathering. "They're probably as insidious and real a threat (as there is) to the United States, as well as China, by the way, and every nation."

Cyber conflict could lead to "quiet, stealthy, insidious, dangerous outcomes," from taking down power grids to destroying financial systems or neutralizing defense networks, Hagel said.

"That's not a unique threat to the United States, (it affects) everybody, so we've got to find ways here ... working with the Chinese, working with everybody, (to develop) rules of the road, some international understandings, some responsibility that governments have to take," he said.

Hagel's remarks came two days after news reports said the Defense Science Board - a committee of civilian experts who advise the Defense Department - had concluded that Chinese hackers have gained access to the designs of more than two dozen major U.S. weapons systems in recent years. The Pentagon downplayed the report as outdated and overstated.

But the Defense Department underscored its concerns about Chinese hacking in a separate report to Congress earlier this month, accusing Beijing of using cyber espionage to modernize its military.

The report said the U.S. government had been the target of hacking that appeared to be "attributable directly to the Chinese government and military."

President Barack Obama has made cyber security a priority of the administration and will discuss his concerns with Chinese President Xi Jinping in a meeting in California next week, White House spokesman Jay Carney said earlier this week.

Hagel told reporters on his plane to Singapore that he had invited Chinese Defense Minister Chang Wanquan to visit the United States and a trip was being organized for August.

Asked whether it was effective to deal with the issue by publicly naming China, Hagel said he thought both public diplomacy and private engagement were necessary. Public statements are necessary to let people know what is going on, he said, but it doesn't solve problems.

"The United States knows ... where many of these incursions come from," Hagel said. "It's pretty hard to prove that they are directed by any specific entity, but we can tell where they come from. And I think we've got to be honest about that."

The problem will ultimately be solved by more private discussions, he added. "But it has to be public as well and we'll deal with this. We must deal with this. This is a very dangerous threat to all of us."

Hagel is due to spend two days at the Shangri-La dialogue, engaging in bilateral and trilateral meetings with his Asian counterparts. He helped gain support for the annual dialogue as a U.S. senator more than a decade ago and was a leader of the first U.S. congressional delegation to the event.

After Singapore, Hagel will travel to a NATO ministerial meeting in Brussels that will hold its first review of cyber defense, a sign the issue is climbing to the top of the alliance's agenda due to concerns its infrastructure and secrets are vulnerable.

NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen has said NATO systems face "regular" computer attacks. Of particular concern are the systems used to coordinate military actions among the 28 allied nations.

Hagel said cyber security would be a centerpiece of the NATO defense ministers meeting, adding "we all need to find ways, international standards, agreements" to commit to responsible use of cyber and "deal with these real threats."

(Reporting By David Alexander; Editing by Paul Simao and Robert Birsel)

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Reuters: U.S.: U.S. discovery of rogue GMO wheat raises concerns over controls

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U.S. discovery of rogue GMO wheat raises concerns over controls
May 31st 2013, 05:27

By Carey Gillam and Julie Ingwersen

Fri May 31, 2013 1:27am EDT

(Reuters) - For global consumers now on high alert over a rogue strain of genetically modified wheat found in Oregon, the question is simple: How could this happen? For a cadre of critics of biotech crops, the question is different: How could it not?

The questions arose after the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced Wednesday that it was investigating the mysterious appearance of experimental, unapproved genetically engineered wheat plants on a farm in Oregon. The wheat was developed years ago by Monsanto Co to tolerate its Roundup herbicide, but the world's largest seed company scrapped the project and ended all field trials in 2004.

The incident joins a score of episodes in which biotech crops have eluded efforts to segregate them from conventional varieties. But it marks the first time that a test strain of wheat, which has no genetically modified varieties on the market, has escaped the protocols set up by U.S. regulators to control it.

"These requirements are leaky and there is just no doubt about that. There is a fundamental problem with the system," said Doug Gurian-Sherman, a scientist at the Union of Concerned Scientists who served on a biotech advisory subcommittee for the Food and Drug Administration from 2002 to 2005.

The discovery instantly roiled export markets, with Japan canceling a major shipment of wheat, a quick reminder of what is at stake - an $8 billion U.S. wheat export business.

Many fear the wheat most likely has been mixed in with conventional wheat for some time, but there are no valid commercial tests to verify whether wheat contains the biotech Roundup Ready gene.

"A lot of people are on high alert now," said Mike Flowers, a cereal specialist at Oregon State University. "We can't really say if it is or isn't in other fields. We don't know."

A month has passed since U.S. authorities first were alerted to the suspect plants in Oregon, yet it remains unclear how the strain developed. Monsanto officials said it is likely the presence of the Roundup Ready genetic trait in wheat supplies is "very limited." The company is conducting "a rigorous investigation" to find out how much, if any, wheat has been contaminated by their biotech variety. U.S. regulators are also investigating.

Bob Zemetra, one of the Oregon State University wheat researchers who first tested the mystery wheat when an unnamed farmer mailed a plant sample, said there is no easy way to explain the sudden appearance of the strain years after field tests ended.

Cross-pollination seems unlikely, Zemetra said, because the field where the plants were discovered was growing winter wheat, while Monsanto had field tested spring wheat. There hadn't been any test sites in the area since at least 2004, making it unlikely the new genetic strain would have been carried on the wind.

"I don't know that we are ever going to get a straight answer, or a satisfactory answer, on how it got there," Zemetra said.

'RIGOROUS TESTING PROTOCOL'

Government records show Monsanto conducted at least 279 field tests of herbicide-resistant wheat on over 4,000 acres in at least 16 states from 1994 until the company abandoned its field testing of wheat in 2004.

Zemetra participated in Monsanto wheat trials a decade ago, while working as a wheat breeder at the University of Idaho. When Monsanto decided to halt the testing, he said, the company had strict rules about handling test materials.

"Pretty much all that seed, and any program that was using it, either buried it, burned it or shipped it back to Monsanto, as part of the instructions for doing the field testing," he said. "It was a very rigorous testing protocol."

Researchers were requested to watch the plots for "volunteer" growth for at least two years after conclusion of the tests, Zemetra added.

Zemetra first became aware of the wheat found in Oregon when a farmer brought in what he described as several isolated wheat plants that had emerged after he sprayed Roundup on a fallow field in eastern Oregon. The farmer had last harvested a crop of white winter wheat from the field in 2012.

A report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office in 2008 highlighted several gaps in regulations designed to prevent genetically altered crops from escaping test plots.

The report's conclusions were based on USDA data that there were 712 violations of its regulations from 2003 to 2007, including 98 that could lead to a possible release of unauthorized crops.

The GAO study said the USDA lacked the resources to conduct routine testing on areas adjacent to the GMO crops. Instead, the report found, the government relied on biotechnology companies to voluntarily provide test results.

A 2005 report by the Office of Inspector General for the USDA was critical of government oversight of field tests of GMO crops. The report said there was a risk "that regulated genetically engineered organisms... will inadvertently persist in the environment before they are deemed safe to grow without regulation."

While the reports noted problems with government oversight, USDA itself lists 21 "major incidents of noncompliance" from 1995 through 2011. Five of those involved Monsanto and included a failure by the company to properly monitor test fields, a failure to follow certain test planting protocols and a failure to properly notify regulators about test activities.

'CAN'T GET RID OF IT'

Developers of biotech crops say testing shows they are safe for humans, animals and the environment, and farmers like Roundup Ready corn, soybeans and other crops because genetic alterations enable them to survive dousings of the herbicide.

But critics of the so-called "Franken foods" point to scientific studies that claim links to health problems, while raising other environmental concerns connected to biotech crops that require close scrutiny.

Many international buyers will not accept genetically modified grain, and several U.S. food companies also reject GMOs. When Monsanto in 2004 shelved its Roundup Ready wheat research, the move came amid a backlash from foreign buyers who said they would reject U.S. wheat if DNA-altered wheat was commercialized.

Still, Alan Tracy, president of U.S. Wheat Associates, said despite the contamination problem, the wheat industry was supportive of continued research into biotech traits for wheat.

Farmers are planting less wheat and more of other crops that have been genetically altered in ways that can help farmers grow more grain, Tracy said.

"Our industry remains strongly supportive of continued research and development of biotech traits for wheat," he said.

But finding ways for conventional grain and biotech grain to co-exist will continue to fall short if regulators don't force crop developers to contain their products, critics said.

"This whole idea of co-existence, that has been the No. 1 theme … at USDA. But you can't have co-existence when you can't control contamination," said Andrew Kimbrell, executive director at the Center for Food Safety, which has sued the U.S. Department of Agriculture to try to force tighter regulation of genetically modified crops.

In the meantime, the search is on for the source of the mystery wheat.

Jim Shroyer, a wheat agronomy expert at Kansas State University, said it was likely the Roundup Ready wheat has grown for years in eastern Oregon only to be discovered recently.

"Probably what happened is it got mixed in with a farmer's field eight years ago and has been there ever since," Shroyer said. "That is the main reason we here in the top wheat state did not want Roundup Ready. You can't get rid of it.

(Reporting by Carey Gillam in Kansas City and Julie Ingwersen in Chicago; Writing by David Greising; Editing by Mary Milliken and Lisa Shumaker)

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Reuters: U.S.: New Yorker wins U.S. spelling bee with 'knaidel'

Reuters: U.S.
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
New Yorker wins U.S. spelling bee with 'knaidel'
May 31st 2013, 03:32

1 of 9. Arvind Mahankali of New York holds his trophy after winning the National Spelling Bee at National Harbor in Maryland May 30, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque

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Reuters: U.S.: Lawyer hopes Arizona mother in Mexico drug bust may soon be freed

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Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Lawyer hopes Arizona mother in Mexico drug bust may soon be freed
May 31st 2013, 03:07

By Tim Gaynor

PHOENIX | Thu May 30, 2013 11:07pm EDT

PHOENIX (Reuters) - The attorney for an Arizona mother jailed in Mexico after marijuana was found under her bus seat said on Thursday that video evidence showed she had boarded the vehicle without the drugs and expressed the hope she could be freed by the weekend.

Yanira Maldonado, a Mormon and the mother of seven children, was arrested on May 22 after Mexican soldiers searched a bus on which she was traveling with her husband, Gary, and discovered some 12 pounds (5 kilograms) of marijuana under her seat.

Attorney Jose Francisco Benitez said a security video from the bus terminal in Los Mochis in northwest Sinaloa state where the couple boarded the bus, showed Maldonado carrying only two blankets, water bottles and her purse.

"The accusation is very weak and got weaker today with the video showing them arriving at the bus," Benitez told Reuters. "You can clearly see on the video that she did not at any moment have drugs."

Benitez said a Mexican judge weighing the evidence has until 6:30 p.m. local time (9:30 p.m. EDT) on Friday to either charge Maldonado with a crime or release her. Asked if he was optimistic that she would be released, he said: "Yes."

Maldonado's case has drawn attention on U.S. cable television, where it is portrayed as tale of a church-going mother from the Phoenix valley caught up in the world of Mexican drug cartels.

Maldonado, who was born in Mexico and is a naturalized U.S. citizen, traveled to Mexico with her husband to attend a relative's funeral. The couple opted to take a bus back to Arizona as they believed it was safer than traveling by car

The bus was pulled over at a military checkpoint about 80 miles south of the Arizona border, where it was searched and the marijuana packages were found, Benitez said.

Maldonado has protested her innocence in television interviews from the prison in the Mexican border city of Nogales where she has been held since last week.

"It's a lie what they are saying. They say they found something under my seat, but I never signed anything, they didn't show me anything," Maldonado told CNN.

"I'm not a criminal ... this is not right, I need to be back with my family, I need to be out of here, I need help."

Her plight has been taken up by U.S. Senator Jeff Flake, an Arizona Republican, who contacted the Maldonado family, as well as officials in Mexico and the United States, his office said.

The saga has also drawn attention to the murky world of drug traffickers who grow marijuana in the rugged heartlands of northwest Mexico and transport it across the Arizona border to satisfy strong demand from U.S. consumers.

(Additional reporting by Lizbeth Diaz in Mexico City; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Christopher Wilson)

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Reuters: U.S.: Lebanese man sentenced for planting fake bomb near Chicago's Wrigley Field

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Lebanese man sentenced for planting fake bomb near Chicago's Wrigley Field
May 31st 2013, 04:08

By Brendan O'Brien

Thu May 30, 2013 11:58pm EDT

(Reuters) - A Lebanese immigrant in Chicago on Thursday was sentenced to 23 years in federal prison for plotting an attack and planting what he thought was a bomb near the city's Wrigley Field baseball park.

Sami Samir Hassoun, 25, pleaded guilty last year to charges of attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction and an explosive device after he placed what he thought was a homemade bomb in a garbage can in the north-side neighborhood during a busy Saturday night, according to court records.

He told an FBI informant and undercover agents he wanted to expose the city's inadequate security measures and embarrass then-Chicago Mayor Richard Daley into resigning, the criminal complaint against him said. It gave no further details as to motive.

In a series of planning meetings secretly tape-recorded by the FBI, Hassoun suggested various attacks including unleashing a virus on the city, poisoning its water supply, bombing the landmark Willis Tower skyscraper, attacking police officers or assassinating the mayor.

On September 18, 2010, undercover agents gave him a fake bomb in a backpack and told him that it was capable of wiping out half a city block, court documents said.

"The thought of what might have happened if it was real is horrific," said U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman, who presided over the sentencing, in a statement released by the U.S. Attorney's office.

Hassoun then drove to Wrigleyville, the neighborhood surrounding Wrigley Field, the home of the Chicago Cubs. The area is known for its bars and restaurants and is densely populated, with blocks of apartment buildings.

He dropped the backpack into a trash can, before being arrested by law enforcement agents, according to the complaint.

Gettleman ordered Hassoun placed on five years of supervised release following his prison term and said he will be subject to deportation when he is released, according to the statement.

The sentencing comes six weeks after Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, and his 19-year-old brother Dzhokhar allegedly set off two pressure-cooker bombs at the Boston Marathon finish line, killing three people and injuring 264.

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is being held at a prison hospital west of Boston awaiting trial on charges that carry the possibility of the death penalty. His brother was killed during a shootout with police.

(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Lisa Shumaker)

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Reuters: U.S.: Hunters for Amelia Earhart plane wreckage excited by sonar image

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Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Hunters for Amelia Earhart plane wreckage excited by sonar image
May 31st 2013, 02:06

The reef at Nikumaroro, Republic of Kiribati, is pictured in this October 1937 photograph released on March 21, 2012. REUTERS/TIGHAR/Eric Bevington/TIGHAR/Handout (

The reef at Nikumaroro, Republic of Kiribati, is pictured in this October 1937 photograph released on March 21, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/TIGHAR/Eric Bevington/TIGHAR/Handout (

By Malia Mattoch McManus

HONOLULU | Thu May 30, 2013 10:06pm EDT

HONOLULU (Reuters) - A team of researchers seeking to solve the mystery of aviator Amelia Earhart's 1937 disappearance say a sonar image taken from just beyond the shore of a remote Pacific island could be a piece of wreckage from her plane.

A forensic imaging specialist for a research team that conducted a $2.2 million expedition to the island of Nikumaroro searching for Earhart's plane last year said the image could represent a wing or part of the fuselage from Earhart's aircraft.

Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, departed Papua New Guinea on July 2, 1937, during her quest to circumnavigate the globe along an equatorial route. But they disappeared that day and emergency searches did not locate them.

The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery (TIGHAR) said it needs to send an expedition back to Nikumaroro, in the Republic of Kiribati, to verify that the image of something apparently lodged below an undersea cliff represents a piece of Earhart's plane.

TIGHAR released images last year from the July expedition to Nikumaroro, 800 miles southwest of Honolulu, that it said could be a field of man-made debris with remnants of Earhart's plane.

The latest sonar image was spotted in March by a member of TIGHAR's online community, said a post on the group's website.

"It looks unlike anything else in the sonar data, it's the right size, it's the right shape and it's in the right place," a statement on the TIGHAR website said this week.

"The resolution on the sonar does not suffice to conclusively determine what this is," Jeff Glickman, the forensic imaging specialist for TIGHAR, said in a phone interview.

"It is unique, and suggestive of being man made. It is in the right place, but whether it's a fuselage or a wing is difficult to say," Glickman said.

He added that "there is always the possibility" the image is of part of a boat that had nothing to do with Earhart.

Richard Gillespie, executive director of TIGHAR, has theorized that Earhart's plane was washed off the reef by surf after Earhart and her navigator landed on Nikumaroro.

Gillespie has said circumstantial evidence collected on previous trips to Nikumaroro makes a strong case for his theory that Earhart ended her days as a castaway, ultimately perishing in the island's harsh conditions.

Items that have been discovered include what appears to be a jar of a once-popular brand of anti-freckle cream from the 1930s, a clothing zipper from the same decade, a bone-handled pocket knife of the type Earhart carried, and piles of fish and bird bones indicative of a Westerner trying to survive.

TIGHAR did not say on its website when the group expects to be able to return to the island.

(Reporting by Malia Mattoch McManus; Writing by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Eric Beech)

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