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News International ‘continued to pay Neil Wallis after he joined Met’

Former deputy editor received £25,000 from News of the World publisher after starting work as consultant with police force The relationship between the police and the News of the World has come under fire again amid revelations that Neil Wallis, the former deputy editor of the News of the World, was paid by the paper’s publisher for “crime exclusives” while working for the Metropolitan police. Wallis was secretly paid more than £25,000 by News International after he left the paper and got a contract to work two days a month as a PR consultant with the Met. One story earned him a single payment of £10,000. The Daily Telegraph claims that internal records obtained by Scotland Yard show that he was paid for providing News International with details of a suspected assassination attempt on the Pope during his visit to the UK last year. A spokesman for Scotland Yard said the contract it had with Wallis’s PR firm, Chamy Media, “had a confidentiality clause, a data protection act clause and a conflict of interest clause within it”. He added that Wallis did not have access to the Met’s IT systems. The revelations that Wallis received money from News International while working for Scotland Yard will raise questions about conflicts of interest. Last month, it emerged that Andy Coulson, the former editor of the News of the World, continued to receive payments from News International as part of a severance deal after he was employed by the Tory party as its director of communications. Wallis’s solicitor has made a complaint alleging that the police had leaked the information regarding the payments. Metropolitan police Police News of the World News International National newspapers Newspapers Newspapers & magazines Lisa O’Carroll guardian.co.uk

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News International ‘continued to pay Neil Wallis after he joined Met’

Former deputy editor received £25,000 from News of the World publisher after starting work as consultant with police force The relationship between the police and the News of the World has come under fire again amid revelations that Neil Wallis, the former deputy editor of the News of the World, was paid by the paper’s publisher for “crime exclusives” while working for the Metropolitan police. Wallis was secretly paid more than £25,000 by News International after he left the paper and got a contract to work two days a month as a PR consultant with the Met. One story earned him a single payment of £10,000. The Daily Telegraph claims that internal records obtained by Scotland Yard show that he was paid for providing News International with details of a suspected assassination attempt on the Pope during his visit to the UK last year. A spokesman for Scotland Yard said the contract it had with Wallis’s PR firm, Chamy Media, “had a confidentiality clause, a data protection act clause and a conflict of interest clause within it”. He added that Wallis did not have access to the Met’s IT systems. The revelations that Wallis received money from News International while working for Scotland Yard will raise questions about conflicts of interest. Last month, it emerged that Andy Coulson, the former editor of the News of the World, continued to receive payments from News International as part of a severance deal after he was employed by the Tory party as its director of communications. Wallis’s solicitor has made a complaint alleging that the police had leaked the information regarding the payments. Metropolitan police Police News of the World News International National newspapers Newspapers Newspapers & magazines Lisa O’Carroll guardian.co.uk

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Autumn Equinox Begins

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Autumn Equinox Begins

humorfeast says: Humor Feast: Autumn Equinox Begins http://t.co/wUhw5SjM via @ humorfeast

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Via Binyamin Appelbaum of the New York Times: A new Federal Reserve study finds that the Federal Reserve is awesome. OK, it’s not quite that simple. In August, the central bank announced that it would keep short-term interest rates near zero for the next two years, in order to encourage borrowing and spur growth. Some

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Via Binyamin Appelbaum of the New York Times: A new Federal Reserve study finds that the Federal Reserve is awesome. OK, it’s not quite that simple. In August, the central bank announced that it would keep short-term interest rates near zero for the next two years, in order to encourage borrowing and spur growth. Some

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Via Binyamin Appelbaum of the New York Times: A new Federal Reserve study finds that the Federal Reserve is awesome. OK, it’s not quite that simple. In August, the central bank announced that it would keep short-term interest rates near zero for the next two years, in order to encourage borrowing and spur growth. Some

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Blogger Attempting To Live Off Of Breast Milk

humorfeast says: Humor Feast: Blogger Attempting To Live Off Of Breast Milk http://t.co/A60T9F0j via @ humorfeast

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We wrote last year about the increasing suburbanization of poverty. Now new data confirms the trend. “From 2000 to 2010, the number of poor people in major-metro suburbs grew 53 percent (5.3 million people), compared to 23 percent in cities (2.4 million people),” write Elizabeth Kneebone and Alan Berube, poverty researchers at the Brookings Institution.

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We wrote last year about the increasing suburbanization of poverty. Now new data confirms the trend. “From 2000 to 2010, the number of poor people in major-metro suburbs grew 53 percent (5.3 million people), compared to 23 percent in cities (2.4 million people),” write Elizabeth Kneebone and Alan Berube, poverty researchers at the Brookings Institution.

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We wrote last year about the increasing suburbanization of poverty. Now new data confirms the trend. “From 2000 to 2010, the number of poor people in major-metro suburbs grew 53 percent (5.3 million people), compared to 23 percent in cities (2.4 million people),” write Elizabeth Kneebone and Alan Berube, poverty researchers at the Brookings Institution.

Continue reading …