Malcolm Grant, the government’s choice to run the powerful NHS commissioning board, makes remarkable admission The health secretary will “franchise” the running of the NHS to a quango for up to three years at a time – a move that will result in an unelected academic and the nation’s 38,000 family doctors, rather than ministers, being accountable for the day-to-day running of the health service, according to leaked documents obtained by the Guardian. In unpublished evidence to the health select committee last week, Malcolm Grant, the government’s choice to run the powerful NHS commissioning board, outlined “an extraordinary transformation of responsibility” that appears to undermine claims by ministers that the proposed legislation will not dilute the government’s constitutional responsibilities to the health service. At present, the cabinet minister for health has a “duty to provide a national health service” in England, but that disappears in the NHS bill’s proposals. Grant, a law professor who runs University College London, told MPs that, under the new system, the secretary of state “mandates” the commissioning board to run the NHS every “two … possibly three years” and then retreats into the shadows. The board will hand over taxpayers’ cash to groups of GPs to buy services on behalf of patients. He admitted there would be “a fundamental change of responsibility and accountability under the bill” because about £80bn of public money would be transferred to the board and GPs. He said these two groups – not politicians – would run the NHS and ensure patients received an adequate level of health provision in England. “If [GPs] are dissatisfied with what happens in a hospital, they need to deal with it and not simply complain to a secretary of state who no longer has this responsibility, nor to the commissioning board which has given them the responsibility, but to complain to the hospital and get it sorted, and, if it is not sorted, to use their commissioning power to ensure that it is.” With peers beginning line-by-line scrutiny of the coalition’s NHS bill on Tuesday, the government has been attempting to rebut detractors of all political persuasions influenced by the powerful Lords constitutional committee. The committee warned last month about the “extent to which the chain of constitutional responsibility as regard to the NHS [will be] severed”. In what is perceived as a sign of panic over the level of peers’ opposition, a 72-page letter from ministers sent to all peers last week conceded a “necessary amendment” might be needed to rectify the impression the government would not be “responsible and accountable” for the NHS. However, Grant, who is expected to take up the post later this month, confirmed the bill’s critics’ worst fears in a combative parliamentary performance last week. In a remarkable admission, Grant told MPs that, from April 2013, in the event of a “crisis” in the health service. either he, nurses, GPs or hospital medical directors would be taking to the airwaves as the health secretary would not have responsibility for the daily running of the NHS. “It is no longer going to be the case that the secretary of state is wheeled in front of the TV cameras,” he told MPs. “Responsibility has to go back to where it is. It has to go back to within those hospitals. Who is the chief nurse? Who is the medical director. Where is the CEO?” MPs questioned how the public would be informed how well the NHS was faring by asking who “will be the person doing Panorama?” Grant replied: “I said this job was full of risks and probably that ends up being one of them.” Parliamentary scrutiny will also become a thing of the past. After the bill is passed, the health secretary will no longer have to answer MPs’ questions every month but will just put forward an annual report on how the board is doing once a year. The secretary of state will also, in effect, lose “powers of direction” over the health service, depriving the minister of the power to order NHS services to improve. The government would find it difficult to repeat Labour’s 2007 act of ordering a “deep clean” of NHS hospitals to tackle a rising tide of MRSA infections. Lady Thornton, Labour’s shadow health minister in the Lords, said: “This completely undermines the 1948 and 2006 acts. The whole point of the debate we’ve been having is that the secretary of state has to be accountable to parliament for the provision of a national health service, and you can’t just start franchising out that role.” To smoke out the government, Labour has also put down a probing amendment before peers which asks the house to concede that the principles of the NHS should be to “promote quality, equity, integration and accountability, not the market”. A Department of Health spokesman said: “The secretary of state will remain responsible for promoting a comprehensive health service and retains the ultimate accountability for securing the provision of services, through his relationship with NHS bodies.” NHS Health Public services policy Health policy Andrew Lansley Randeep Ramesh guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …COLUMBIA, S.C. — Former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford is joining Fox News as a political commentator through the 2012 presidential elections, a Fox Channel spokeswoman confirmed Saturday. The network spokeswoman told The Associated Press the two-term Republican governor has been hired as a contributor, though she declined to give any details on his pay or when he would start. Sanford was a rising political star before he vanished from the state for five days in 2009, and reporters were told he was hiking the Appalachian Trail. When he reappeared, the father of four admitted to being in Argentina with a woman he later called his soul mate. The international affair destroyed his marriage, which ended in divorce, and derailed his once-promising political career, which had included talk of presidential aspirations. Sanford faced impeachment hearings in 2009 after the state ethics commission looked into his use of state planes, campaign cash and first-class travel stemming from the affair. The GOP-dominated House issued a formal rebuke but did not impeach Sanford, who paid $74,000 in ethics fines and reimbursed the state for the investigation and for travel and personal expenses. But Sanford, a former congressman, remained well-regarded in conservative circles. He railed about spending, and his unwillingness to compromise with his fellow GOP leaders in the Legislature resulted in some very public disagreements. He once toted squirming, defecating piglets to the doors of the House to protest budget veto overrides. He also unsuccessfully sued the Legislature to bar the state from getting federal stimulus money. His persistent warnings about rising deficits and his opposition to federal mandates fed what would become tea party mantras. The term-limited Sanford has appeared on Fox since leaving office in January. In September, he told the Associated Press his interview with Sean Hannity was his way of slowly getting back to talking about the nation’s troubles. “I think this represents me sticking my toe back in the water and talking about things I care about,” he said then. “I care passionately about the direction of this country and deficit and debt and all the things that seem to be in vogue right now.” He reiterated that he had no intentions of getting back into politics, though he noted he’s learned “you never say never in life.” Sanford did not immediately return phone or e-mail messages Saturday. Sanford’s new job was first reported by The New York Times.
Continue reading …ATLANTA — Herman Cain is learning the hard way what it means to face the glare of the national spotlight. After captivating Republicans hungry for an alternative to 2012 GOP presidential front-runner Mitt Romney, Cain has made a series of stumbles that have left some questioning whether he’s ready for the White House. His words and actions have drawn more scrutiny since his rise in the polls catapulted him into the top tier of the race for the party’s white House nomination. But Cain has sometimes appeared to be in over his head. Consider what’s happened over the past week: _He suggested electrifying a fence along the U.S. border with Mexico to kill illegal immigrants trying to enter the United States. Cain later called it a joke and apologized if anyone was offended by the remarks. _He said he would negotiate for the release of U.S. prisoners held by terrorists, then reversed himself and said he had misunderstood the question. _He muddied the water on abortion. He told CNN that while he strongly opposes abortion, “the government shouldn’t be trying to tell people everything to do, especially when it comes to social decisions that they need to make.” He later issued a statement reiterating his opposition to abortion. _Amid criticism that his 9-9-9 tax overhaul would force the majority of Americans to pay more to the government, he reworked the plan to exclude the poorest people and to allow some deductions. Backers of Cain’s original plan had praised its simplicity, and carving out exceptions could erode that support. Through it all, Cain has appeared unflappable. He chalks up the reversals to the breakneck pace of the race. “In a couple of instances … I misspoke because of the pace of the interview. I don’t call it a flip-flop. I’d rather come back and explain to people what I really meant,” Cain said Friday after an economic speech in Detroit. “It doesn’t send mixed messages. It just shows that I’m willing to correct myself … if in fact I need to correct myself for clarity. That’s what I’m trying to achieve.” For those in the GOP still in search of a candidate to back, his rocky rollout on the national stage has reinforced the view that Cain, who’s never won an election, isn’t ready for the big leagues. “I’m looking for someone that’s electable and right now I don’t think he fits into that category,” said 60-year-old Gene Carkeet of Memphis, Tenn., who attended a recent Cain rally there but remains undecided. Gwen Ecklund, Republican chairwoman in Crawford County, Iowa, said Cain “has had a bad week.” “I do think it made some people take a second look,” she said. Cain’s stumbles come as the campaign of rival Rick Perry shows signs of renewed vigor. The Texas governor has plummeted in public opinion polls as Cain has climbed. But Perry turned in a spirited and combative debate performance at a recent forum in New Hampshire and plans to detail his own tax reform proposal relying on a flat tax under which everyone would pay the same income tax rate. Cain and Perry are competing for support from tea party groups and evangelical voters. Ralph Reed, a Republican strategist who founded the national Christian Coalition and now heads the Faith and Freedom Coalition, said Cain is going through the growing pains that come with sudden national exposure. “It’s a learning curve for any candidate who moves from the back of the pack to front of the pack,” Reed said. “You undergo the political equivalent of a GI tract exam … where every word is weighed and chewed over and scrutinized.” Reed said that after months of jumping on every media appearance offered, Cain and his staff must now limit his exposure and hammer home carefully honed talking points. That’s a tall order for a man who has spent years as a conservative radio talk-show host, saying what was on his mind and scoring points for being provocative. Whether Cain’s willingness to retool his 9-9-9 tax plan will be seen as a strength or a weakness is an open question. “I guess we’ll see what the polls say next week,” said Grover Norquist, head of Americans for Tax Reform. Norquist had been critical of Cain’s original proposal. Not everyone is disheartened by Cain’s missteps. Kay Godwin, co-founder of Georgia Conservatives in Action, said she is still solidly behind him. “”Look at Romney and Perry at the last debate. They can’t even be civil to each other on a stage in front of a national audience,” Godwin said. “At his core, Herman has the heart to save this country.” ____ Elliott reported from Detroit. ____
Continue reading …UPDATE, 10.22: NPR, having failed to pressure WDAV into getting rid of Lisa Simeone as the host of “World Of Opera,” has gone ahead and done the next best thing. The AP reports that NPR “will no longer distribute the member station-produced program “World of Opera” to about 60 stations across the country.” WDAV will distribute the show themselves. These are some extraordinary measures that NPR has taken to ensure that the people who use their airwaves to discuss opera do not have any evident political opinions. — Lisa Simeone, a freelance content provider for a pair of radio shows that are broadcast by National Public Radio, is under fire today for her tangential participation in the OccupyDC movement. Simeone, who has worked in radio for over two decades, is the host of a WDAV radio show called “World Of Opera,” and a freelancer for a program called “Soundprint”. She also participates in an activist organization called “Stop The Machine,” which is part of the broader Occupy movement. Simeone has, for a long time, blended her love for grassroots political activism with her talent for radio, without anyone objecting. Her involvement in the Occupy movement, however, seems to have been deemed by NPR to be a bridge too far. That NPR has a history of hasty personnel decisions and a pathological aversion to their employees being publicly exposed as having opinions surely does not help. Sure enough, the hammer is being lowered, and it’s being lowered rather awkwardly. Simeone, as it happens, is not an NPR employee, so what appears to be happening is that they are putting pressure on her employers to get rid of her. Wednesday night, she was fired from “Soundprint,” despite the fact that the show isn’t produced by NPR. According to reports, Simeone was read the NPR code of ethics at the time of her dismissal. But NPR was pretty hot to get Simeone dismissed from “World of Opera” as well, and until this afternoon, Simeone had to await word on whether she’d continue to be allowed to fully exercise her rights while simultaneously continuing to appreciate opera on the radio. (Erik Wemple gives good comedy on how Simeone’s politics could creep into her coverage of opera.) This morning, NPR posted a “clarification” on their website regarding the matter which suggested that the screws were being put to WDAV: We recently learned of World of Opera host Lisa Simeone’s participation in an Occupy DC group. World of Opera is produced by WDAV, a music and arts station based in Davidson, North Carolina. The program is distributed by NPR. Lisa is not an employee of NPR or of WDAV; she is a freelancer with the station. We’re in conversations with WDAV about how they intend to handle this. We of course take this issue very seriously. That we’re even having a conversation of the political leanings of someone who hosts a program on opera enthusiasm basically precludes the possibility that anyone is taking anything “very seriously.” And, indeed, when we reached out to NPR’s Director of Media Relations, Anna Christopher Bross, the task of taking it seriously became even harder. In an interview with the Huffington Post, Bross essentially admitted that she’d never actually verified whether Simeone was a “spokesperson” for “Stop The Machine” at all, and that NPR’s actions were prompted solely on hearsay. “It seems from media reports that she’s a spokesperson for ‘October 2011′ [a Stop the Machine campaign],” Bross said. When asked why she would characterize Simeone as a “spokesperson,” Bross reiterated, “We said ‘spokesperson’ because she was quoted as a spokesperson in many media reports and then other press said she had functioned in a spokesperson role.” When we asked what “other press” had made these claims, Bross replied, “I don’t know.” Officials at WDAV radio in Davidson, North Carolina, who produce “World Of Opera,” have resisted the pressure to fire Simeone. WDAV’s Lisa Gray wrote that Simeone “is an independent contractor of WDAV Classical Public Radio” and that her “activities outside of this job are not in violation of any of WDAV’s employee codes and have had no effect on her job performance … Ms. Simeone remains the host of World of Opera.” Simeone offered a rebuttal to NPR for the Baltimore Sun’s David Zurawik: “I’m not an NPR employee … I’m a freelancer. NPR doesn’t pay me. I’m also not a news reporter. I don’t cover politics. I’ve never brought a whiff of my political activities into the work I’ve done for NPR World of Opera. What is NPR afraid I’ll do — insert a seditious comment into a synopsis of Madame Butterfly?” In an interview with the Huffington Post, Simeone was just as emphatic. “My work has never suffered or betrayed my political activities,” she said. “Nobody has anything to complain about with regard to my work. What I’m doing on my own free time was exercising my right as an American citizen — not harming any of these entities.” Simeone is at a loss as to why “Soundprint” deemed it necessary to fire her: “It’s a documentary series. It consists of half-hour documentaries acquired from producers all over the world on all kinds of subjects. Two documentaries in one hour. My job was to listen to the documentaries and write an introduction. I was expected in my introduction to express a point of view. That’s a whole other irony. I’ve never hidden my political views. It’s not really a surprise where I stand politically. I haven’t lied.” As far as her involvement with the Occupy demonstrations, Simeone sums it up like this: “I did a lot of chanting … I did interviews with the press.” When she spoke to the media about Stop the Machine’s “October 2011″ campaign, she would identify herself as a member of the steering committee, not a spokesperson. And she didn’t camp out: “I’m a wimp and I need to sleep on a bed.” Soundprint’s Moira Rankin doesn’t see it that way. “Lisa is taking a leadership role, acting as a spokesperson as well as being on the steering committee. That is fine to do whatever she thinks is important. However it’s not compatible with being the host of documentary series on public radio,” said Rankin. “Our programs are broadcast over NPR. The listener doesn’t understand the difference between the host of a show on NPR and the host of Soundprint.” She apparently takes a dim view of her listeners’ intelligence. Rankin continued: “We are not a news program. We try to give context to the news. We do like to have writers have strong points of view when they are writing. That doesn’t mean they are writing from a political angle.” Of Simeone, she says, “She’s a very good writer, a very good presence on public radio. That’s not the issue. The issue is the integrity of what we put out every week. I agree that she should have full exercise of [her rights to assemble and demonstrate] but that doesn’t mean that she can also be a journalist.” NPR has an ethics policy for its journalists that precludes them from participating in “public relations work, paid or unpaid.” NPR’s Bross told the Huffington Post, “Other public radio people have read and used NPRs code of ethics because its a very strong code of ethics.” There are, however, allowable exceptions, “for certain volunteer nonprofit, nonpartisan activities, such as participating in the work of a church, synagogue or other institution of worship, or a charitable organization, so long as this would not conflict with the interests of NPR [and WAMU] in reporting on activities related to that institution or organization.” (Presumably, NPR’s frequent pledge drives are also an allowable exception to the ban on public relations work as well.) But NPR has to have known that Simeone has been a longtime political activist. She’s been upfront about her involvement with Stop The Machine since she joined up. Her bio on the organization’s website reads: “Lisa Simeone is a proud loudmouthed feminist and rabble-rouser. Her husband wonders whether her love of natty dressing might interfere with her participation in the revolution.” Along with other members, like Andy Shallal, David Swanson, and Chris Hedges, Simeone cut a video, announcing that she’d be participating in D.C. demonstrations. And back in March of this year, she was arrested while participating in an anti-war demonstration in front of the White House. No one seems to have been particularly bothered by that event at the time, and in all likelihood, it’s because of the reputation she’s earned for herself. Over at Poynter, Julie Moos points to this 1994 piece from the Baltimore Sun, titled “The familiar tones of Lisa Simeone rise in protest,” that emphasizes how Simeone managed to develop a reputation for balancing these two parts of her life”: In the four weeks since Baltimore County Judge Robert E. Cahill sentenced a man to 18 months in jail for killing his wife hours after finding her in bed with another man, Ms. Simeone has helped organize demonstrations at both the Towson courthouse and a judicial conference on domestic violence and discussed the case on her weekly interview program with Johns Hopkins professor Mark Crispin Miller. She was even more outraged 18 months ago when Baltimore County Judge Thomas J. Bollinger granted probation before judgment to a man found guilty of raping an unconscious 18-year-old. That case prompted Ms. Simeone to found a Baltimore chapter of the Women’s Action Coalition. On the air, Simeone hardly comes across as some raving ideologue. Her dulcet tones, which have wafted over Baltimore’s airwaves for more than a decade, have won her quite a following — including some people who disagree strongly with her views, but appreciate her voice and her taste in music. “She is someone blessed with a tremendous warm voice and manner and a good knowledge of classical music,” says conservative talk-radio host Ron Smith of WBAL, praising Simeone for restricting her views to her interview program. “She doesn’t directly espouse her views on the air that I’ve ever heard. You only hear about them when you read about them.” “I like her. I think she’s really fun,” says Les Kinsolving of WCBM radio, whose conservative credentials would seem to put him at odds with someone like Simeone. “She’s very attractive and fiery and fun. She’s a very colorful person and I enjoy her.” So Simeone is well known for being a grass-roots activist and a talented radio presenter, two sides that she’s successfully kept compartmentalized to everyone’s satisfaction, until now. Given how much of her identity is tied to activism, it’s simply not credible that any of her employers could have been ignorant of her involvement in these causes. Speaking with Zurawik, Simeone also noted the existence of a double standard: “This sudden concern with my political activities is also surprising in light of the fact that Mara Liaason reports on politics for NPR yet appears as a commentator on FoxTV, Scott Simon hosts an NPR news show yet writes political op-eds for national newspapers, Cokie Roberts reports on politics for NPR yet accepts large speaking fees from businesses. Does NPR also send out ‘Communications Alerts’ about their activities?” I’m guessing that no one has an objection to Liasson, Simon, or Roberts because they successfully project an air of indifference over the plight of people who are economically dislocated. NPR has had a troubled history in dealing with the way the human beings they employ tend to have opinions. When Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert brought their “Rally To Restore Sanity And/Or Fear” to the District of Columbia, NPR employees were not allowed to participate, lest they become publicly exposed as people who like jokes, or performances from The Roots. As Danny Shea reported at the time: NPR has reminded its employees that they are not allowed to participate in the upcoming rallies led by Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert. “NPR journalists may not participate in marches and rallies involving causes or issues that NPR covers, nor should they sign petitions or otherwise lend their name to such causes, or contribute money to them,” Senior Vice President for News, Ellen Weiss, wrote in a memo Wednesday morning. “This restriction applies to the upcoming John [sic] Stewart and Stephen Colbert rallies.” NPR CEO Vivian Schiller forwarded the memo, sent initially to news staff, to the entire organization, telling employees that the note applied to “digital, programming/AIR, legal and communications” employees in addition to the news staff. “However, no matter where you work at NPR you should be very mindful that you represent the organization and its news coverage in the eyes of your friends, neighbors and others,” Schiller continued. “So please think twice about the message you may be sending about our objectivity before you attend a rally or post a bumper sticker or yard sign. We are all NPR.” And NPR has a similarly checkered past when it comes to dealing with the personnel decisions that arise as a result of their policy against opinions. When Juan Williams was cashiered for making remarks on “The O’Reilly Factor” about airplane passengers in “Muslim garb,” it was done in an extremely unprofessional manner: over the phone, without Williams being allowed to speak in his own defense. (Why NPR could not have simply offered a countering opinion to Williams’ own, continues to be confusing. It suggests that they were motivated more out of a dislike of Williams, and less out of a concern that Muslims should be allowed to travel on airplanes.) Simeone plans to continue to participate in the demonstrations in Freedom Plaza in Washington, D.C., regardless of how NPR feels about it. “I’m not an NPR journalist,” she said. “I wasn’t covering any of these issues for NPR. I was just an aware citizen.” [Would you like to follow me on Twitter? Because why not? Also, please send tips to tv@huffingtonpost.com -- learn more about our media monitoring project here.]
Continue reading …Deborah Bradley, the mother of missing Kansas City infant Lisa Irwin, has come under a cloud of suspicion, as police accuse her of being uncooperative and her recollection of events leading up to the disappearance seems to change. None of that appears to surprise Shirley Pfaff, who describes herself as Bradley’s former best friend. “She was my friend at one time and I loved to be around her, but when I [saw] the other side of her and got to know the true Debbie, I couldn’t even believe I trusted her with anything,” Pfaff told The Huffington Post. Bradley and Lisa’s father, Jeremy Irwin, reported their daughter missing on Oct. 4. Bradley and Irwin said the 10-month-old infant was discovered missing when the father returned home from working a night shift. They suggest she was kidnapped from an unlocked window as the mother and two other boys slept. The case has garnered national media attention and, Bradley went on NBC’s “Today” show on Monday to break a nine-day silence. She admitted she had been drinking “enough to be drunk” on the night of her baby’s disappearance and told NBC’s Peter Alexander that the last time she saw her daughter was actually at 6:40 p.m. on the night of her disappearance, not 10:30 p.m. as she had originally told police. Bradley has also admitted to failing a police-administered lie detector test. “They said that I failed when they asked me where she was [and] if I knew where she was,” Bradley said. Pfaff said she was surprised by Baby Lisa’s disappearance, but not by the inconsistencies surrounding Bradley’s story. “I am not shocked that her story has changed like the wind,” she said. “That’s typical Debbie.” Pfaff, who now lives in Erie, Pa., said she met Bradley in 2002 at Ft. Bragg, N.C. They were military wives at the time and lived across the street from each other. The couple’s kids played together and they quickly became close friends, she said. “When the story broke, it was a normal morning in my house,” Pfaff added. “I got up, put on a pot of coffee and turned on ‘Good Morning America’ like usual and I … heard ‘Deborah Bradley.’ I immediately thought, ‘This can’t be the Debbie I know.’ It just seemed unreal until I walked back into the living room after hearing her voice. I just about collapsed. It just made me sick because I just wouldn’t put this girl Debbie past anything crazy.” Despite clearing nearly 700 tips and leads in Baby Lisa’s disappearance, investigators say they have no suspects in the case. Nevertheless, Bradley has said she expects to be arrested, but told NBC News she hoped that would not happen. “I had absolutely nothing to do with it,” she said. “It’s a waste of time, money, energy and focus and people should be looking for [Lisa].” SEE PHOTOS: (Articles Continues Below) While authorities have declined to discuss many aspects of the case, they did spend a significant amount of time conducting an aggressive search of Bradley and Irwin’s house. “We were out at the house on a search warrant for a very long time yesterday and into early this morning,” Kansas City police spokesman Capt. Steve Young told The Huffington Post. Police, with assistance from the FBI, were seen digging in the backyard of the residence and they hauled off several bags of items. “Some things were taken from the home but I can’t go into detail on what was taken or what was learned or not learned from the search yet,” Young said. “Should we learn something from this search that we think would benefit the case by making public, we will definitely be all over that.” Authorities had conducted previous searches of the home, as well as nearby wooded areas and a landfill. The parents’ attorney, Joe Tacopina, said he would contact The Huffington Post “as soon as possible” today; however, no call was received. Tacopina told People his clients are available to investigators to answer questions, but Young said “their level of cooperation is not what we believe it needs to be.” Although the parents’ level of cooperation with authorities remains in question, they have participated in a rash of recent TV interviews. According to Pfaff, Bradley often wants to be the center of attention. She also said her former friend has a dark side. She can be a con artist and is able to turn on fake tears. It is that side of her, Pfaff said, that destroyed their friendship. “I was friends with Debbie for some time [and] then the ‘friend’ I once grew fond of became a ‘problem’ I had to deal with on a daily basis,” she said. Pfaff said she was happy when the military transferred her husband. “Me and my ex-husband got orders to be stationed overseas in Europe shortly after mine and Debbie’s friendship diminished,” she said. “So I thought of that as a new clean slate for us, without all the drama Debbie created with and around us.” Pfaff would not elaborate on the exact problems she had with Bradley, but insisted she is not a “Debbie-basher.” “My intentions of speaking with the media [are] to shed some light on the Debbie I once knew, both good and bad,” she said. Contacted by The Huffington Post today, Baby Lisa’s aunt, Ashley Irwin, indicated the family believes the infant is alive and is still with her abductor. “We have no evidence, no leads and no idea where she is,” Irwin said. “We need everyone’s help to keep an eye out for her and bring her home as she could be anywhere. There is a $100,000 reward for her safe return. The offer of dropping her off somewhere safe, no questions asked, is still applicable.” Irwin declined to discuss the case further. “If you want any more details you’ll have to ask their attorney,” she said. Pfaff said she has followed the case in the news and is “completely shocked” that some people have been “actually vouching, claiming [Bradley] could never have done anything to baby Lisa.” She added: “I pray every night that the baby is found. For better or for worse, I just pray for her return and hope justice will be served for whoever has done anything with or to the innocent baby girl.” WATCH:
Continue reading …KANSAS CITY, Mo. — An FBI cadaver dog reacted to the scent of a dead person inside the Kansas City home where a baby girl disappeared nearly three weeks ago, according to a police affidavit released Friday. The affidavit was filed to support a search warrant request for the home of Deborah Bradley and Jeremy Irwin, who reported their 10-month-old daughter, Lisa Irwin, missing Oct. 4 and said someone must have crept into the home and taken the girl while the mother and two other boys slept. The affidavit said the dog taken into the house Monday indicated a “positive `hit’ for the scent of a deceased human in an area of the floor of Bradley’s bedroom near the bed.” A judge approved the warrant Tuesday and police and the FBI conducted a daylong search Wednesday. Court documents filed Friday said police took blankets, toys and clothing from the house, as well as rolls of tape and a tape dispenser. MORE PHOTOS FROM THE LISA IRWIN DISAPPEARANCE (STORY CONTINUES BELOW): The family’s local lawyer, Cynthia Short, did not immediately return a phone call seeking comment, and police declined to discuss what they found. However, the family’s attorney released a statement earlier in the day saying that they were fully cooperating with investigators, the Associated Press reported. The police declined to elaborate on the search of the parents’ home. “We aren’t able to talk about specifics of the case,” said police spokeswoman Stacey Graves. “The documents that were made public will have to stand on their own.” The FBI dogs, which often are used at both disaster and crime scenes, are trained “specially to recognize the scent of decaying, decomposing human flesh,” retired FBI special agent Jeff Lanza said Friday. “That’s what they hit on. What the dogs are saying is that they smell that scent,” Lanza said. “That can be the scent of an actual body decomposing, or residual scents after the body is no longer there.” Wednesday’s search was perhaps law enforcement’s most aggressive yet at the parent’s home, drawing officers armed with shovels, rakes and other tools who hauled off bags that appeared to be full of potential evidence. Police also brought in a bomb and arson truck to assist the search, though spokesman Capt. Steve Young said there were no indications of explosives in the house. Some bomb detection devices use X-ray technology to scan solid objects to reveal items concealed within. An AP reporter saw investigators carrying at least a dozen thin, black rectangular sheets away from the home during the afternoon.
Continue reading …Eric Cantor chickened out of a long-planned lecture at Wharton when he found out Occupy Philly was planning a march in his honor: U.S. Rep. Eric Cantor, the Republican majority leader in the U.S. House, canceled his scheduled speech at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business because if was going to be open to the first 300 people who showed up. Given that hundreds of Occupy Philadelphia protesters were planning to march from City Hall to the campus to protest the speech, that could have been a lively audience. “The Office of the Majority Leader was informed last night by Capitol Police that the University of Pennsylvania was unable to ensure that the attendance policy previously agreed to could be met ,” Cantor spokeswoman Laena Fallon said in an email. “Wharton is a educational leader in innovation and entrepreneurship, and the Majority Leader appreciated the invitation to speak with the students, faculty, alumni, and other members of the UPenn community.” Cantor had expected that his speech, on income disparity in the country, would be open to the media, Wharton students and faculty and guests of the university. The Daily Pennsylvanian , the student newspaper, has more here. You might want to read the comments from some of the Wharton students, who are clearly convinced of their own superiority.
Continue reading …We have written extensively about Delta here at Crooks and Liars. This union busting, consumer hating enterprise is the Scott-Walker-in -the-Sky Airlines . So it was no surprise this week when we learned more disturbing information about how Delta continues to screw American consumers while buying the politicians in D.C. Over at AmericaBlog, Aravosis wrote this week how carriers like Delta have been basically making “a windfall” during recession by taxing American consumers through exorbitant baggage fees in recent years. Now comes a report from the Roll Call that Delta has been buying congressional influence through offering ridiculous perks not available to average consumers (emphasis added): Some perks reach beyond the Beltway. Most major airlines have phones lines dedicated to customers on Capitol Hill, aides and lobbyists told Roll Call. To accommodate their unpredictable travel schedules, Members are allowed to reserve seats on multiple flights but pay only for the one they board. A spokesman for Delta confirmed the airline has a Congressional call desk and allows Members to double-book flights . United Continental Holdings Inc., US Airways and American Airlines, all of which are rumored to have similar practices, did not return Roll Call’s request for comment. “We get on every single flight,” said one Capitol Hill aide familiar with process. “Every offices uses it. … The scheduler uses it for Members and chiefs of staff who fly.” The perks have long raised the ire of consumer advocates. “They are treated completely differently from the time they book their ticket until the time they land at the airport ,” said Kate Hanni, director of Flyers Rights, an airline passenger advocacy organization. The news about Delta is not surprising. They have a history of rewarding members of congress – mostly Republicans – who help further their anti-union goals. As Campaign Money Watch reported recently, “Delta’s been spending money wisely to try to overturn the decision to let workers organize more easily. They spent $1.6 million on lobbying during the first half of 2011, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. (Over the past ten years they spent at least $32 million to influence Washington.) Their PAC has given $826,243 to members of Congress since 2000. Adding additional incentive for Republicans in Congress to stand with them, Richard Anderson, Delta’s CEO, made a $5,000 contribution to the Senate Republican’s campaign committee earlier this year — apparently his first one ever.” Also reported by the Atlanta Journal Constitution were Delta’s timely contributions to key Members of Congress to drive the unrelated, ideologically anti-union provisions included in the House version of the FAA Reauthorization legislation. It sounds like Delta is making a clear stake at positioning itself as the airlines of the 1 percent. Maybe it is time to #OccupyDelta?
Continue reading …File this under Despicable Things Police Have Done: An Atlanta woman was mistakenly imprisoned for 53 days due to police mixing her up with another woman with the same first name. Teresa Culpepper thought that police who turned up at her house last August were responding to her call earlier that day reporting her truck
Continue reading …David Attenborough’s latest TV series, Frozen Planet, is being heralded as his take on climate change. Now 85, he explains why – finally – he’s speaking out on the issue, and shares the joys of a long life spent filming sex and death in the wild ‘I’m not a propagandist, I’m not a polemicist; my primary interest is just looking at and trying to understand how animals work,” says David Attenborough. We are talking in a gigantic BBC sitting room. Attenborough, wearing slacks, shirt and jacket, is a trifle unkempt at 85,
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