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Va. Passes Abortion Regs Favored by 55% of Voters, WaPo Notes NARAL Activist ‘Teared Up’ After Vote

The Washington Post is no opponent of economic regulation. But dare to touch the largely unregulated abortion industry and it's quite a different story . In a 23-paragraph Metro section front-pager entitled “Stricter Va. rules on abortion gain,” * Post staffer Anita Kumar –see our archive on her bias here — noted in her lead paragraph that “the Virginia Board of Health overwhelmingly approved far-reaching regulations for abortion clinics” yesterday that “some operators say could shut down many of the state's 22 facilities” when they go into effect at the end of the year. Kumar (pictured at left) presented the new regulations as the cause of sadness and righteous indignation among opponents. In her third paragraph the Post reporter noted NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia official Tarina Keene had “teared up after the vote” and in paragraph seven Kumar quoted an unidentified man railing against the “government dogs” who “should know better.” Although Kumar noted a recent poll shows 55 percent of Virginia voters support “requiring clinics to meet hospital-type regulations” and observed the hearing was marked by “passionate public testimony from residents split over the regulations,” Kumar only quoted two supporters ** of the regulations compared to five opponents. It wasn't until paragraph 16 that Kumar noted the bipartisan support for the new regulations as the state Board of Health is comprised of nine members appointed by Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell and six by his Democratic predecessor, former DNC chairman Tim Kaine. Three of Kaine's appointees joined McDonnell's appointees, one voted against the regs and two “were absent from the meeting.” *The online headline is different: “Va. Board of Health approves stricter rules for abortion clinics” **Kumar also quoted a spokesman for Gov. McDonnell, Jeff Caldwell, but his was a neutral quote: “We will review the regulations as approved by the board in the weeks ahead.”

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Spain raises taxes on the rich

Prime minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero reinstates the sort of wealth tax that he abolished just before the recession Spain today became the latest European country to hike taxes on the wealthy, with a new asset-based tax targeting the country’s richest people. Spain’s socialist government hopes that the new wealth tax will raise up to €1bn in a country where growth is grinding to a halt and this year’s 6% deficit target looks increasingly tough to meet. The move represents a U-turn for prime minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, who abolished a similar wealth tax in 2008 — just before the country plunged towards recession. “The economic crisis makes it necessary to bring this tax back, applying principles of fairness so that those with bigger assets can be taxed and so those who have greater wealth can contribute more to getting the country out of the crisis,” a finance ministry statement said. Spaniards with €700,000 of assets in real estate – excluding their main home – as well as in stocks and bank deposit will have to pay the new tax. “It excludes the middle classes, who were the ones who had been largely affected by it when it was eliminated in 2008,” the statement said. “We estimate the number of people who will contribute at around 160,000, with annual payments of about €1.08bn if it is applied evenly across Spain,” it added. The wealth tax will go to Spain’s cash-strapped regional governments, though some of them are opposed to it. Only one of the eleven regions currently governed by the right-wing opposition People’s Party (PP) has so far indicated that it will apply the tax. It remained unclear how many others, including the wealthy Madrid region, would join the PP-administered region of Extremadura. But with fierce austerity measures in place, PP regional governments will come under intense pressure to use the tax. “In moments of hardship it is fair that those who have more should give more, just as some of the wealthiest people in Germany and France have offered to do, especially as they are less affected by measures that have been applied to pensions, salaries, lay-offs and income tax or VAT hikes,” said José María Mollinedo, head of the tax inspectors’ union. Spain’s wealthy largely avoid income tax, with only some 7,000 people declaring annual taxable income above €600,000. Emilio Botín, head of the Santander banking group and Spain’s tenth wealthiest individual, said that he disagreed with the move. “I think it’s bad,” he told journalists. Global recession Economics Global economy Spain Europe Tax and spending Giles Tremlett guardian.co.uk

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London fashion week: wardrobe watch  – in pictures

From high-street purchases to vintage finds to family heirlooms, here’s what the punters have on today Sara Ilyas

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Third trapped miner found dead in flooded Welsh colliery

Rescuers hope remaining man of four trapped at least 300 metres from entrance to Gleision mine can be found alive A third body has been found at the Gleision colliery in south Wales, which was flooded in an accident on Thursday, police have confirmed. A second body had been discovered earlier on Friday afternoon. Rescuers hope the remaining man of four who were trapped at least 300 metres from the entrance to the colliery can be found alive. Chris Margetts, of the South Wales Fire and Rescue Service had earlier said the first dead miner was found at the bottom of the main shaft and had evidently been trying to escape. The second was found where he had been working. The families of the men have been told, although their names have not yet been made public. There had been hopes that the men may have found an air pocket when the tunnels were flooded. Margetts described how difficult the search had been. “The water and oxygen levels are very good, but the issue now is debris,” he said. “We’re using seismic listening devices so that any noises are investigated.” He explained the progress the search and rescue teams had made, saying they had cleared the blockage to get to the main shaft. However, he warned that it was a slow process to search the “myriad” tunnels. “Access has been gained into the main shaft at the bottom,” he said. “We’ve cleared the blockage and we’ve got rescue crews that are able to enter and start searching the myriad tunnels and offshoots of the main shaft. “It’s slow progress – they have to dig through silt as they’re going because a lot of debris has been washed through the mine shaft. After the second body was found, the Neath MP, Peter Hain, said the events of the past few hours had made the “living hell” of the miners’ families even worse. He added: “This terrible situation has just got worse. However, the emergency services are doing a fantastic job in very difficult circumstances. “Their efforts are to be commended. There is a ray of hope in that there is no methane in the mine, and that air is circulating.” The Welsh secretary, Cheryl Gillan, expressed her sadness at hearing of the second death. Earlier on Friday, she had met the families of the miners who were trapped. “This is a distressing day for all involved, and I am extremely saddened to hear the news that a second death has been confirmed,” she said. “This tragedy has touched everyone in what is a very tight-knit community. Having just met the families, I know they take great comfort in the messages of support they have received from not only the UK but across the world. Our thoughts are with the families at this extremely difficult time.” Three men escaped from the mine after the accident, which happened when blasting work caused water to flow in the tunnels. Two were on the side of the blast closest to the main mine exit, while the third managed to crawl out through old mine workings. The four men who were trapped have been named as Phillip Hill, 45, from Neath, Charles Breslin, 62, David Powell, 50, and 39-year-old Garry Jenkins, all from the Swansea Valley. Police said emergency services were continuing a multi-agency rescue operation, while the men’s families were being supported by family liaison officers. Fresh rescue teams have been brought in to relieve crews that had worked for at least 12 consecutive hours. One of the miners who escaped is critically ill in hospital, while the two others who got out were largely unharmed and are helping with the rescue operation. The alarm was raised at the pit at around 9.20am on Thursday. An emergency centre has been set up within the community hall in the nearby village of Rhos to cater for the families of the miners. The Red Cross has delivered blankets and pillows to the centre. Wales Steven Morris Shiv Malik guardian.co.uk

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Previously on Hell’s Kitchen my C&L blog, I cooked an absolutely stunning beef wellington wrote about the disturbing trend of Americans being arrested for filming cops. I happen to be one of the unfortunate saps who’s been put in the slam simply for pointing a camera at police. So without further ado, here’s the second installment of my own private police state… “They got me on some straight-up bull—-, son!” exclaimed the kid sitting next to me in the bullpen at the Erie County Holding Center. “What they get you on?” “I shot a cop,” I growled, shooting him an icy stare. “And I’d do it again.” “Son?!” His face froze in delighted dismay. “Real? That f—– dead?!” “I really doubt it.” “Jablaow!” he mimicked a gunshot, aiming his hand at the mucus-encrusted, blood-smeared brick wall. “What’d you use–a nine, forty-five…” “A Sony Handycam,” I said with the unflinching nerve of a coldblooded videographer. “It’s the same kind James O’Keefe uses; he told me himself .” “James who, f—–?” he balked. “Pfft! You on some f—–’ camera shit, son?” “Yeah,” I said. “I shot a video of a cop.” “Pfft! That ain’t no law, son. Somebody need to tell them motherfuckers!” he hollered, slapping the cold, metal bench. “We all in here on some bull—-!” *** Bunting swung by my place at about 2pm and we headed to the demonstration downtown. The New York Marriage Equality Act went into effect the previous evening, and the National Organization for Marriage (NOM) was protesting gay marriage throughout the state, for reasons of a religious and hate-filled nature. We wanted to cover the event properly, so we brought along a video camera, a couple bibles, and a massive latex dildo/microphone. The jiggly kind is best for serious journalism. We circled the block a few times, parked and walked over to the growing crowd at Niagara Square. To our surprise (and because most had been bused in from out of state), the delusional NOM bigots totaled about 250. The righteous counter-protesters were only about a dozen strong. As press, we moved among both factions, asking questions. “The bible says nothing about gay marriage,” I told a NOM supporter, “and marriage invariably results in less sex, so wouldn’t it stand to reason that, as a Christian, you should support gay marriage?” He was confused. “Would it be fair to say that you’re doing The Lord’s work here today?” I pressed him. After much squirming, “Yes,” was his answer. I pointed to the bible, politely informed him that he shouldn’t be working on the Sabbath, and told him he was going to hell. It’s in the bible. We also talked to this hayseed who subsists, ostensibly, on moneys derived from the Tooth Fairy. In a hill-folk whistle, he claimed to be “a low-level politician.” He had glossy, moonshine eyes. And dementia, possibly. “They took our rights!” he claimed. I didn’t bother to ask how. “Your pants are clearly a poly-cotton blend,” I informed him. “You’re going to hell. It’s in the bible.” The crowd started chanting, “Let the people vote!” Because social conservatives are not allowed to vote for governor or state legislature. Then they started singing; it was pretty gay. “How great is our God?” went the seemingly endless refrain. Not great enough to stop gay marriage which, for an omnipotent being, should have been pretty easy. One would imagine. “This here’s a chocolate protest,” I heard one woman say to another. Indeed, most of the NOM supporters were black and, apparently, incapable of detecting the historic irony in their prejudice. “Excuse me, ma’am,” I beckoned one lady. “Are you menstruating?” “Well, this is what this is all about,” she inexplicably answered. I was like, “Whaaaa?” “He’s trying to say you’re unclean,” her husband chimed in. “It’s in the bible,” I said. “You’re going to hell.” She then claimed that the New Testament was her guiding principle. I quickly shot back that in Matthew 5:17-20 Jesus said he didn’t come to change the law. Bunting had made a note of this in anticipation of her predictable nonsense. He spends his spare time studying apologetics. I prefer to stab at my eyes with needles. But to each his own–unless it impinges on the rights of others. We lingered on the outskirts of the protest. Bunting taped while I interviewed. I snagged a beardy bible-humper, but the noise of the rally was ruining our audio, so I broke out the dildophone. “How do you define marriage?” I asked him, waving the wobbly latex member near his face. “I hope someone does this to your child,” he said, slowly slinking away. “I’m sorry,” I said, trailing him. “Could you speak into the mic?” He walked backwards while craning his neck toward the dildophone to chastise us on the record. “You’re going to have to speak into the mic, sir,” I said, wiggling it near his face. He then fled. About five or six pro-gay marriage counter-protesters were standing on the steps of City Hall, right in the middle of the NOM people, holding up humorously scathing signs. The noble police force on hand sprung into action and banished them across Delaware Ave to Niagara Square, which is where the rest of the counter-demonstrators stood. One woman had to be forcibly removed by a large, bald copper–the brave lad. I grabbed the camera from Bunting and tried to get some footage of the action, but the crowd was too thick, and I ended up just trailing them across the street to interview the woman. She told us about a few indignities she and her children had suffered at the hands of Christ’s flock over the years, and we agreed that most homophobes are really just secret, self-loathing queers. It’s a pretty good rule of thumb. As is their constitutional right to peacefully assemble, the counter-demonstrators offered appropriate counter-chants to the NOM nonsense. “Let us vote!” they chanted. “58 percent support gay marriage!” the counter-demonstrators replied. The cops were determined to silence the counter-demonstrators. Bunting filmed an exchange between officer Donna Donovan, who was presumably conceived to the tune of Donovan’s “Donna Donna,” and a couple of the human-rights advocates on scene. She flipped out and said, “I don’t want my picture taken. I don’t want my picture taken!” She then charged at Bunting, stomped on his foot and slapped the camera down from his face. She threatened to arrest him. Myself and a few others informed her that it’s not illegal to videotape her in public. A few minutes later, Donovan was lecturing some counter-demonstrators about how “disrespectful” they were being and that they needed to shut up. “Being disrespectful isn’t illegal,” I told her and grabbed the camera from Bunting. The lecture continued, so I trained the camera on the exchange. “I told you that I don’t want my picture taken!” Donovan shouted, charging at me. She slapped at the camera and broke out her handcuffs. I held out my right hand, thinking she was full of shit. She clapped the cuff down on my wrist with the intensity of a woman bent on causing physical pain. I held the camera out with my left hand to pass it to Bunting. I was being unlawfully arrested and I knew they’d erase the exonerating footage. “Josh!” I yelled. “Josh!” He turned around to grab the camera, as Donovan pulled my right hand behind my back and tried to violently slap the camera to the ground. Bunting took the camera, she finished cuffing me, the cops confiscated the camera from Bunting and then they took me on a televised perp walk. Once in the squad car, cuffs cutting into my wrists, I tried to ask her why I was being arrested. I said, “I don’t understand–” “No!” she screamed. “You don’t understand what we go through! You don’t know me! I don’t care what you people do in bed!” She went off in that manner, for a solid two minutes, and I told her she needed anger management. And, absolutely, she does need to work on her people skills. It was immediately apparent that she has a diminutive woman cop Napoleon complex, and she overcompensates by being an unreasonable bully. *** When they bring you into the holding center, cuffed behind your back, they ask you to stand next to a white brick wall and stare at a red X made of electrical tape. Apparently, eight inches is too far away from the wall, so Donovan told me to get closer and pushed me up against it. Her co-worker cop dude then said, “See, I would have introduced him to the X and not been so nice about it.” So she says to me, “You hear that?” in this smart-ass tone. I said, “Yeah, I heard that. He intimated that he was going to bash my head against a brick wall because he’s a f—ing a–hole.” He replied, “I didn’t say I was going to bash your head against the wall.” “Yeah,” I replied, “and you don’t know the meaning of the word ‘intimate’ either.” Donovan then said, “He just thinks he’s always getting bashed because he’s gay.” I told her I wasn’t, but it didn’t matter either way. She then said I was in denial. Her a–hole partner then said, apropos of nothing, “He’s an atheist.” They both chuckled derisively, for some f—ing reason. Again, I asked why I was being arrested. Donovan said that I was “behind her shouting things,” and explained to the other cop that I was a counter-demonstrator. I informed her that, no, I was in the press, reporting on the event. I informed her that yelling is not illegal, that I was not chanting, and I inquired how she knew I was yelling if I was behind her. “My kids say I have eyes behind my back,” she said, smugly. The cops moved me into a smaller processing room, removed the handcuffs, put me up against a wall and had me take off my pants. Luckily for me, I had the keen foresight to cover the rally commando. One cop made a show of loudly snapping on some latex gloves. My a–hole did not want. But all he did was shake out my pants, searching for contraband. Another cop went through the camera bag. “You got any weed in here?” the one cop asked. “The bag smells like weed.” They were getting excited by the prospect of having something to legitimately charge me with. “You don’t know what weed smells like then,” I told him. No weed. Idiot. “Whoa!” he yelped upon discovering the dildophone. I explained what it was for, but they said they didn’t believe me, and tried to embarrass me about it. I ran for the disgusting office of Congress; I am beyond embarrassment. The cop asked rhetorically of the clean dildophone, “What’s this brown stuff on it?” They all laughed. “Probably bodily fluids,” I said. “I bought it from a hobo who pulled it out of his a–.” Donovan learned that I was with The BEAST, and that I’d be writing about the incident, so she said that she’d be sure to get news out about the dildo before I got released. And then a cop I couldn’t see behind the desk asked, “Is he a f—ing faggot or something?” And they all laughed. They moved me down the line for more questioning. “Religion?” the one cop asked. This is done for special meal requirements, etc., but having just been mocked for my atheism, I was a bit touchy. “Why the f— does that matter?” I asked. “It’s a f—ing question on the form is why it f—ing matters!” he yelled. “Get the f— in there!” There was the mucus and blood stained bullpen. Later he’d call me out for my mugshot, which I couldn’t help but smirk about. “Yeah, go ahead and smile, a–hole,” he said. “You’re being arrested, moron. Real f—ing funny.” I don’t know what they expect; the sign on the wall to the right included a photocopied image of a shirtless Patrick Swayze which read, “Road House”. This is apparently the totally unfunny place you’re supposed to look when they snap your profile picture. I waited in the frigid bullpen with a half a dozen detainees for a few hours, being called out periodically to answer questions about my mental health and get my fingerprints scanned. The cop who took my prints was actually a really nice guy, who could teach Donovan a thing or two about dealing with people. Eventually, they gave me my free phone call and took me upstairs to a private 8 x 6 cell. I’ve stayed in seedier hotels but, in contrast to the bullpen, there didn’t seem to be any air conditioning at all. I sleeplessly sweated through the night, as they never turn off the lights. *** Tune in next time to see if I survived the night (hint: I did), and to read about the ridiculous charges against me (the complainant listed on the police report is “Sony”)! Later.

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North and South Korea set to make sweet music together

Symphony orchestras from both Koreas reach agreement to play joint concerts in Pyongyang and Seoul A renowned South Korean conductor hopes one of the country’s leading orchestras can make sweet music with its counterpart from the north, despite the lengthy period of discord on the peninsula. Myung-whun Chung said symphony orchestras from the two Koreas were poised to hold performances in both capitals. “We reached an agreement to hold a joint concert in Pyongyang and Seoul at around December,” he said. “The rest is up to the politicians which I have no say or control over, but hopefully our plan will be realised.” Chung, director of Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra, said he conducted rehearsals and auditions with local musicians during a four-day trip to Pyongyang, as well as meeting cultural officials. “I don’t realistically hope that this might bring any changes to the North Korean system, though I did make some genuine, individual connections through our shared love for music,” he added. “We’ll see where that takes us from here in terms of progress, but as musicians, politics plays no part in what we do.” A government official in Seoul said it had yet to discuss the issue. South Koreans require state approval to travel to the north. If the trips go ahead they will not be Pyongyang’s first attempt at musical diplomacy. The New York Philharmonic visited North Korea in 2008. North Korea South Korea Classical music Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk

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Phone hacking: Met seek court order to reveal the Guardian’s sources

Unprecedented move sees Scotland Yard use the Official Secrets Act to demand the paper hands over information The Metropolitan police are seeking a court order under the Official Secrets Act to make Guardian reporters disclose their confidential sources about the phone-hacking scandal. In an unprecedented legal attack on journalists’ sources, Scotland Yard officers claim the act, which has special powers usually aimed at espionage, could have been breached in July when reporters Amelia Hill and Nick Davies revealed the hacking of Milly Dowler’s phone. They are demanding source information be handed over. The Guardian’s editor, Alan Rusbridger, said on Friday: “We shall resist this extraordinary demand to the utmost”. Tom Watson, the former Labour minister who has been prominent in exposing hacking by the News of the World, said: “It is an outrageous abuse and completely unacceptable that, having failed to investigate serious wrongdoing at the News of the World for more than a decade, the police should now be trying to move against the Guardian. It was the Guardian who first exposed this scandal.” The NUJ general secretary, Michelle Stanistreet, said: “This is a very serious threat to journalists and the NUJ will fight off this vicious attempt to use the Official Secrets Act … Journalists have investigated the hacking story and told the truth to the public. They should be congratulated rather than being hounded and criminalised by the state. “The protection of sources is an essential principle which has been repeatedly reaffirmed by the European court of human rights as the cornerstone of press freedom. The NUJ shall defend it. In 2007 a judge made it clear that journalists and their sources are protected under article 10 of the Human Rights Act and it applies to leaked material. The use of the Official Secrets Act is a disgraceful attempt to get round this existing judgment.” The paper’s revelation in July that police had never properly pursued the News of the World for hacking the phone of the missing murdered girl caused a wave of public revulsion worldwide. The ensuing uproar over police inadequacy and alleged collusion with the Murdoch media empire swept away the top officers at Scotland Yard. It also brought about the closure of the News of the World itself, the withdrawal of the Murdoch takeover bid for Sky, and the launch of a major judicial inquiry into the entire scandal. Metropolitan police commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson and assistant commissioner John Yates both resigned. David Cameron’s former PR chief Andy Coulson is among those who have subsequently been arrested for questioning, along with former News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks. Police now intend to go before a judge at the Old Bailey in London on 23 September, in an attempt to force the handover of documents relating to the source of information for a number of articles, including the article published by Hill and Davies on 4 July disclosing “the interception of the telephone of Milly Dowler”. Documents written by both reporters about the Milly Dowler story are covered by the terms of the production order police are now demanding. The application, authorised by Detective-Superintendent Mark Mitchell of Scotland Yard’s professional standards unit, claims that the published article could have disclosed information in breach of the 1989 Official Secrets Act. It is claimed Hill could have incited police working on the then Operation Weeting hacking inquiry into leaking information, both about Milly Dowler and about the identity of Coulson, Rebekah Brooks and other arrested newspaper executives. A police officer is also being investigated, Scotland Yard say, for breaching the Official Secrets Act, as well as alleged misconduct in public office, for which the maximum sentence is life imprisonment. An obscure clause – section 5 – of the 1989 Official Secrets Act, highly controversial at the time of its passing, allows individuals to be prosecuted for passing on “damaging” information leaked to them by government officials in breach of section 4 of the same act. This includes police information “likely to impede … the prosecution of suspected offenders”. The clause is aimed at those who deliberately derail investigations by, for example, tipping off a suspect about an impending police raid. But it is being used in this case in an unprecedented way, against individual journalists for publishing a news article. The Guardian’s reporters did not pay any police officers. Police claim their work might be undermined by the alleged leaks. The head of Operation Weeting, deputy assistant commissioner Sue Akers, is on record deploring that some details of inquiries have apparently leaked to the Guardian. Some of the arrestees are reported to be already claiming that media publicity will prevent them getting a fair trial. Scotland Yard says it has not officially released any of the arrestees’ names, none of whom has as yet been charged with any offence. But they do not assert that anyone was “tipped off” by the arrest disclosures in the Guardian or other papers. Most of those questioned were arrested by appointment. The only previous attempt to use the 1989 Official Secrets Act against a journalist collapsed 11 years ago after a public outcry. Lieutenant Colonel Wylde, a former military intelligence officer, and author Tony Geraghty were arrested in December 1998 by defence ministry police after early morning raids at their homes. Both had computers and documents seized. This followed the publication of Geraghty’s book The Irish War, which describes two British army computer databases in Northern Ireland used to identify vehicles and suspects. Expert reports were produced by the defence showing the information was not damaging. After consultations with Labour attorney general Lord Williams of Mostyn, both cases were finally dropped in November 2000. Wylde’s lawyer, John Wadham, then of Liberty, said: “This case should never have got off the ground … This case is another nail in the coffin of the Official Secrets Act. The act is fundamentally flawed and needs to be reformed.” In the same year, police failed in a similar attempt to get a production order for journalistic material from the Guardian and the Observer, over correspondence with renegade MI5 officer David Shayler. The appeal court, led by Lord Justice Judge, ruled: “Unless there are compelling reasons of national security, the public is entitled to know the facts, and as the eyes and ears of the public, journalists are entitled to investigate and report the facts … Inconvenient or embarrassing revelations, whether for the security services, or for public authorities, should not be suppressed. “Legal proceedings directed towards the seizure of the working papers of an individual journalist, or the premises of the newspaper … tend to inhibit discussion … Compelling evidence would normally be needed to demonstrate that the public interest would be served by such proceedings. “Otherwise, to the public disadvantage, legitimate inquiry and discussion, and ‘the safety valve of effective investigative journalism’ … would be discouraged, perhaps stifled.” In 2009 the police threatened to prosecute Conservative MP Damian Green for “aiding and abetting, counselling or procuring misconduct in a public office”. The director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer, intervened in that case, saying he did not consider that the damage caused by the leaked information outweighed the importance of the freedom of the press. Only last week the culture secretary, Jeremy Hunt, told MPs: “There is an important difference between off-the-record briefing and the payment of money by or to the police in return for information. “Journalists must operate within the law, but … we must be careful not to overreact in a way that would undermine the foundations of a free society.” At a speech at the Royal Television Society this week, Hunt praised the Guardian’s coverage of the hacking scandal, describing it as “investigative journalism of the highest quality”. The former Met commissioner Stephenson admitted to MPs that he had tried to talk the Guardian out of its phone-hacking campaign in December 2009. He added that “we should be grateful” to the Guardian for ignoring his advice and continuing its campaign. Phone hacking The Guardian Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Metropolitan police London Police Official Secrets Act David Leigh guardian.co.uk

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UBS trader Kweku Adoboli charged with fraud

Trader was charged after more than 24 hours in Bishopsgate Police Station following his arrest at 3.30am on Thursday morning Kweku Adoboli, the 31-year-old one-time star trader at UBS, has been charged with fraud by abuse of position and false accounting barely 24 hours after the Swiss bank warned his alleged “unauthorised trading” could cause a $2bn (£1.3bn) loss. The City of London police said that Adoboli, British educated and of Ghanaian descent, remains in custody at Bishopsgate police station and will appear at City of London magistrates court later on Friday. “At 12.56hrs the Crown Prosecution Service authorised the charging of Kweku Adoboli, from Bethnal Green. City of London police has since charged the 31-year-old with fraud by abuse of position and false accounting. He remains in police custody and is due to appear at City of London magistrates this afternoon,” the police said. The forced added that the investigation is ongoing and officers continue to work in “close collaboration” with the Financial Services Authority, the Serious Fraud Office and the CPS. He is understood to have hired Kingsley Napley, the firm of lawyers that represented Nick Leeson when his £800m rogue trading caused the collapse of Barings in 1995. There was no immediate response from the firm of lawyers. Adoboli was charged after more than 24 hours in Bishopsgate Police Station following his arrest at 3.30am on Thursday morning. His employers tipped off the police at 1am on Thursday after learning about his trading activities on the so-called Delta One desk in the heart of the third floor dealing room in UBS’s headquarters in Liverpool Street. The Swiss bank is expected to reveal more information about this alleged activities later on Friday. His registration with the Financial Services Authority was switched to “inactive” on Friday at the request of UBS, indicating that he is no longer working in that role. There are now expectations that the Swiss bank will scale back its investment banking operation in the City , potentially causing thousands of job cuts among the 6,000 City-based workforce. Kweku Adoboli UBS Banking Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk

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“We counted, in the Republican debate [hosted by MSNBC at the Reagan Library], we counted 26 ideological questions…. Out 26 questions, how many do you think came with a left-wing ideological bent?” NewsBusters publisher Brent Bozell asked Fox News host Sean Hannity on his eponymous program last night. “Twenty-five out of 26″ Bozell informed a stumped Hannity, referring to a study released Tuesday by Media Research Center (MRC) deputy research director Geoff Dickens. “Now, that's perfectly fine if you're going to play devil's advocate… but that's not what these questions are,” MRC founder Bozell added, noting that the media don't hit Obama from the right on policy questions in interviews. For the full “Media Mash” segment, watch the video in the embed below or click here for MP3 audio .

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Riot remands could force reopening of run-down prison wings

Prison service considers reopening mothballed cells or opening new prison early as inmate numbers break last week’s record Prison service chiefs are considering reopening dilapidated prison wings to cope with a new record high in the jail population in England and Wales. Prison numbers, swollen by a tough approach to remanding alleged rioters in custody, hit 87,120 on Friday – 278 higher than last week’s record high of 86,842. Ministry of Justice figures showed that the record prison population for the second week running left prison chiefs with only 1,600 spare places in the system. A spokesman for the prison service said it was in an unprecedented situation. “We currently have enough prison places for those being remanded and sentenced to custody as a result of public disorder. We are developing contingencies to increase usable capacity should further pressure be placed on the prison estate,” he said. The options being looked at included reopening a dilapidated wing at Lewes jail, East Sussex, which had been closed and mothballed pending its refurbishment, and opening accommodation earlier than expected at the new Isis prison, next to Belmarsh in south-east London. No prisoners are currently being held in police cells under the emergency Operation Safeguard arrangements. The chief inspector of prisons warned earlier this week that the rise in prison numbers after the riots was fuelling tensions and gang culture inside English jails. Frances Crook, of the Howard League for Penal Reform, said a record prison population was “a sign of failure, not success It shows that we are still not solving the problems that lead to crime in the first place. As the prison population reaches an all-time high, it is more important than ever to address our failing penal policy. People leave prison more dangerous than when they first entered having learned criminal tricks of the trade in our colleges of crime.” Prisons and probation UK riots UK criminal justice Alan Travis guardian.co.uk

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