The mother of the 10-year-old girl who modeled for Vogue Paris , creating a furor in America over the sexualization of children, has responded to criticism by closing her daughter’s Facebook page and leaving a parting message blaming “bad personn in usa [sic],” reports the Telegraph . Although Thylane Loubry Blondeau has…
Continue reading …Billionaire financier George Soros is often in the news, but not often for such sordid reasons: 28-year-old Brazilian soap star Adriana Ferreyr claims he was violent in bed and reneged on a real estate gift to the tune of $1.9 million. Ferreyr filed a $50 million lawsuit against Soros…
Continue reading …How unpopular is Congress today? With approval ratings as low as 14%, the current Congress ranks below human cloning, caning vandals, and— gulp —banks and HMOs, reports the Washington Post . Congress is even liked less than George W. Bush at the lowest ebb of his presidency in 2008. “It’s undoubtedly…
Continue reading …Lucinda Moyers would like to set something straight: She was in the same hotel as Alex Trebek last month for illegal purposes, but not to burglarize the Jeopardy host’s room. Moyers, who was arrested on theft charges after Trebek chased her down (and tore his Achilles tendon in the process),…
Continue reading …What goes way, way down must come up? Stocks gained at the opening bell, with the Dow rising about 150 points to 10,870, and the S&P 500 and NASDAQ following suit, up 11 and 37 points, respectively, reports MarketWatch . Volatility was the name of the game in pre-market trading,…
Continue reading …Pfizer pays compensation to families of four children after 15-year legal battle over controversial drug trial in state of Kano The parents of four Nigerian children who died of meningitis have become the first winners of a 15-year legal battle against Pfizer over a fiercely controversial drug trial. The world’s biggest research-based pharmaceutical company announced on Thursday that it had made payments of $175,000 (£108,000) to each family. More such compensation settlements are expected to follow. Pfizer was sued after 11 children died in a clinical trial when the northern state of Kano was hit by Africa’s worst ever meningitis epidemic in 1996. A hundred children were given an experimental oral antibiotic called Trovan, while a further hundred received ceftriaxone, the “gold-standard” treatment of modern medicine. Five children died on Trovan and six on ceftriaxone. But later it was claimed that Pfizer did not have proper consent from parents to use an experimental drug on their children and questions were raised over the documentation of the trial. Legal action filed against the company alleged that some received a dose lower than recommended, leaving many children with brain damage, paralysis or slurred speech. US-based Pfizer had argued that meningitis and not its antibiotic had led to the deaths of 11 children and harm to dozens of others. But in 2009 it reached a tentative out-of-court settlement with the Kano state government worth $75m. The families of four of the children each collected cheques for $175,000 from a compensation trust fund, after submitting DNA samples to show that the dead were their offspring. The compensation was the first given out by the Healthcare/Meningitis Trust Fund. The decision over who is compensated and for how much is being managed by an independent board of trustees in Kano, not by the government or Pfizer, the company has said. “We are pleased that these four individuals, the first group of qualified claimants of the Healthcare/Meningitis Trust Fund, have received compensation,” said a spokesman. “This is the first step in a multiphase review process by which the independent board of trustees that manages the funds will deliver payments to all other claimants. “We thank them for their commitment and dedication to seeing this process through in the most timely and transparent way possible.” But one parent who lost a daughter said the process was still dogged by local factionalism and he had no idea when he would receive money. “I talked to my attorney this week,” said the man, who did not wish to be named for legal reasons. “They are still in contact with Pfizer as to when I will get paid. We are just crossing our fingers.” He added: “We are fed up with this case. Our children are dead and some are maimed. We want to end this matter now, but some people are being opportunist for riches.” Pfizer said in February it had settled all outstanding lawsuits involving accusations that it tested the experimental antibiotic Trovan on children. The pharmaceutical giant also agreed to sponsor health projects in Kano as well as creating a fund of $35m to compensate those affected. But last year a US diplomatic cable uncovered by WikiLeaks revealed that Pfizer hired investigators to look for evidence of corruption against the Nigerian attorney general in an effort to persuade him to drop the legal action. The cable reported a meeting between Pfizer’s country manager, Enrico Liggeri, and US officials at the Abuja embassy on 9 April 2009. It stated: “According to Liggeri, Pfizer had hired investigators to uncover corruption links to federal attorney general Michael Aondoakaa to expose him and put pressure on him to drop the federal cases. He said Pfizer’s investigators were passing this information to local media.” There is no suggestion that the attorney general was swayed by the pressure. Pfizer had planned to sell Trovan in the US and Europe after the trials on African children. However, its licence was withdrawn in Europe because of concern over liver toxicity. Nigeria Africa Pfizer Pharmaceuticals industry David Smith guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Cameron’s insistence that cuts will go ahead amid top officers’ fury over criticism set him on collision course with police David Cameron is on a collision course with the police after the government used an emergency Commons debate on the English riots to issue a point-by-point dissection of the police’s “insufficient” tactics during the week. The prime minister praised the bravery of the police but said they had made a major miscalculation when violence first erupted in Tottenham on Saturday night after a demonstration over the shooting of Mark Duggan. Cameron said: “Police chiefs have been frank with me about why this happened. Initially the police treated the situation too much as a public order issue – rather than essentially one of crime. The truth is that the police have been facing a new and unique challenge with different people doing the same thing – basically looting – in different places all at the same time.” But a few hours later the home secretary, who opened the lengthy Commons debate on the riots on Thursday, warned that the failure of the police to contain violence in the early part of the week jeopardised a core British tradition. “Policing by consent is the British way,” Theresa May told MPs. “But the police only retain the confidence of the wider community if they are seen to take clear and robust action in the face of open criminality. On Monday night it was clear that simply there were not enough officers on duty.” May identified a series of mistakes. These included failing to put enough officers on the streets of London until Tuesday night, leading to the police losing control of some areas; appearing reluctant to be “sufficiently robust” in breaking up groups; containing suspects in a “specified area”, rather than arresting them, thereby allowing them to commit criminal damage and steal; failing to do enough to harness and share intelligence gleaned from social networking services such as BlackBerry Messenger. The government also refused to reconsider plans to cut £2bn from police funding over the next four years – despite calls from Boris Johnson, the Police Federation and Labour. Senior police officers quickly made clear their anger with ministers. “David Cameron blamed the police for not having a crystal ball and not anticipating the most serious set of circumstances ever seen,” one senior police source said. “The confidence of the police leadership in the government is at an all-time low. Cameron dumps on the police when it suits him, to deflect blame from himself.” The Met defended itself in response to the criticisms. Deputy assistant commissioner Steven Kavanagh said in response to criticisms of the policing on Monday night: “It certainly stretched us. It is clear we did not have the numbers on duty to deal with that despite having mobilised the same number of officers as the total staff of West Midlands police. Our officers did the very best that they could, they did it bravely and they put themselves in danger to do what they could for the safety of London. They showed discipline and professionalism, which should never be seen as a sign of weakness.” The tensions flared after Cameron delighted the Tory right with a series of hardline measures to avoid a repeat of the “most appalling scenes” in English cities: • Police will be given discretion to remove face masks from people on the street “under any circumstances where there is reasonable suspicion that they are related to criminal activity”. • No “phoney human rights concerns” about publishing CCTV images of suspects involved in rioting would be allowed to “get in the way of bringing these criminals to justice”. • Rioters could face eviction from social housing as rules on benefits are tightened. At the moment tenants can be evicted if they riot in their locality. This will be widened to include other areas. • The government would work with the police, the intelligence services and industry to look at whether it would be possible to stop people communicating via social websites to plan disorder, violence or criminality. • Police should be allowed to examine “all available technologies”, the prime minister said after the Tory MP Andrea Leadson asked for rioters to be sprayed with indelible chemical dye. • May will work with Iain Duncan Smith, the work and pensions secretary, to produce a cross-government action programme on gangs. This would be a “national priority”. May would report to parliament in October amid evidence that gangs co-ordinated some of the attacks on the police and some of the looting. • The army could be used for guarding duties if there were a repeat of such widespread riots in order to free up police to deal with violence. • Any homeowner or business person whose property was damaged could seek compensation under the Riot Damages Act even if they were uninsured. The home secretary said: “I know that [MPs], like members of the public, are concerned about the speed and quality of the police response. That response has changed over the course of the last five days and has been different in different parts of the country. We need to appraise it honestly, bluntly and learn the lessons where things have gone wrong.” The country’s most senior police officers were furious at the criticism of their operational tactics on the ground. As well as May’s comments about the Met, it is understood Cameron made open criticism of Greater Manchester police during a Cobra meetingon Thursday, suggesting their decision to withdraw officers who were faced with 1000-strong gangs in Salford on Monday needed to be examined to see if lessons could be learned. Chief Constable Peter Fahy had already made clear publicly that the rioters in Salford were very different to those elsewhere in the city or the rest of the country, as they were largely made up of organised crime gangs seeking payback after major operations against them by the police and that his officers withdrew in order to regroup and tackle the gang again. But senior officers have been surprised also by May seemingly offering them support – commenting on the police’s bravery and commitment in private and in public. Some sources see this as more positive than what they say is Cameron’s “political posturing.” Paul McKeever, president of the Police Federation, said Cameron’s stance on police cuts was indefensible. “He is like a scientist who has a pet theory which has been completely debunked by exposure to reality. But he refuses to face that. The 16000 officers who have been on the streets in London are the number he wants to cut – that is the reality.” But Cameron was adamant that the cuts, which he said would amount to 6% in cash terms, would go ahead. Introducing efficiencies would ensure no fall in the number of frontline officers. He said: “Over the next four years we are looking for cash reductions in policing budgets. Once you take into account the fact there is a precept, that helps fund the police, [the actual cash reduction of 6% over the next four years] is totally achievable without any reductions in visible policing. A growing number of police chiefs are making that point. “Today we still have 7,000 trained police officers in back office jobs. Part of our programme of police reform is about freeing up police for frontline duties. That is why I can make this very clear pledge to the house. At the end of this process of making sure our police budgets are affordable we will still be able to surge as many police on to the streets as we have in recent days in London, in Wolverhampton, in Manchester. I do think it is important people understand that.” Nick Clegg endorsed the prime minister’s stance on police cuts. But there were signs of tensions within the coalition as Liberal Democrat sources indicated they felt uncomfortable with the prime minister’s decision to revive his pre-election theme of “broken society”. The Lib Dems are also uncomfortable about plans to introduce elected police commissioners, though they recognise this is in the coalition agreement. Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary, accused ministers of unsettling the police by declining to say whether the extra police costs over the last week would be funded from the reserve or from existing police budgets. It is understood that the costs will be funded from the reserve, though the Treasury and Home Office are squabbling which of their reserves will be hit hardest. UK riots Conservatives Liberal-Conservative coalition Police Nicholas Watt Sandra Laville Vikram Dodd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The Dougherty gang’s time on the run was the stuff of movies—and the details of the siblings’ capture are no less colorful. As reported yesterday , the sister was shot in the leg: It apparently happened as Lee Grace Dougherty ran through a field, armed with an automatic pistol that…
Continue reading …Stomach-turning news out of Norway: Terror suspect Anders Behring Breivik may have video footage of the Utoya island massacre that left 69 people dead. A police lawyer says information from Breivik’s manifesto and interrogations indicates “that he did have a camera,” Sky News reports, although police have not yet located…
Continue reading …Ben Bernanke’s Tuesday announcement that the Fed will keep short-term interest rates close to zero for at least two more years, is facing internal revolt from the Federal Open Market Committee, the 12-member committee of Fed presidents and governors that sets monetary policy, reports the Wall Street Journal . Bernanke is…
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