Showing posts with label urged. Show all posts
Showing posts with label urged. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Newtown 911 dispatcher urged callers to take cover



(AP) — Recordings of 911 calls from the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting that were released Wednesday show town dispatchers urged panicked callers to take cover, mobilized help and asked about the welfare of the children as gunshots could be heard at times in the background.


One caller told police in a trembling, breathless voice that a gunman was shooting inside the building.


“I caught a glimpse of somebody. They’re running down the hallway. Oh, they’re still running and still shooting. Sandy Hook school, please,” the woman said.


In the minutes that followed, staff members inside the school pleaded for help as Newtown police juggled the barrage of calls.


The calls were posted on the town’s website under a court order after a lengthy effort by The Associated Press to have them released for review.


Another call came from a custodian, Rick Thorne, who said that a window at the front of the school was shattered and that he kept hearing shooting. While on the line with Thorne, the dispatcher told somebody off the call: “Get everyone you can going down there.”


Thorne remained on the phone for several minutes.


“There’s still shooting going on, please!” the custodian pleaded to Newtown’s 911 dispatcher, as six or seven shots could be heard booming in the background. “Still, it’s still going on!”


The gunman, 20-year-old Adam Lanza, shot his way into the school the morning of Dec. 14 and killed 20 children and six educators with a semi-automatic rifle. He also killed his mother in their Newtown home before driving to the school, and he committed suicide as police arrived at the scene.


Seven recordings of landline calls from inside the school to Newtown police were posted. Calls that were routed to state police are the subject of a separate, pending freedom of information request by the AP.


Prosecutors opposed the tapes’ release, arguing among other things that the recordings could cause the victims’ families more anguish.


“We all understand why some people have strong feelings about the release of these tapes. This was a horrible crime,” said Kathleen Carroll, AP executive editor and senior vice president. “It’s important to remember, though, that 911 tapes, like other police documents, are public records. Reviewing them is a part of normal newsgathering in a responsible news organization.”


As the town prepared to release the tapes, the superintendent of Newtown schools, John Reed, advised parents to consider taking steps to limit media exposure for their families, as he did before the release last week of a prosecutor’s report on the attack.


On the day of the shooting, the AP requested 911 calls and police reports, as it and other news organizations routinely do in their newsgathering.


Newtown’s police department effectively ignored the AP’s request for months until the news cooperative appealed to the state’s Freedom of Information Commission, which said in September that the recordings should be released.


The prosecutor in charge of the Newtown investigation, State’s Attorney Stephen Sedensky III, had argued that releasing the tapes could prove painful to the victims’ families, hurt the investigation, subject witnesses to harassment and violate the rights of survivors who deserve special protection as victims of child abuse.


A state judge dismissed those arguments last week and ordered the tapes be released Wednesday unless the state appealed.


“Release of the audio recordings will also allow the public to consider and weigh what improvements, if any, should be made to law enforcement’s response to such incidents,” Superior Court Judge Eliot Prescott said.


“Delaying the release of the audio recordings, particularly where the legal justification to keep them confidential is lacking, only serves to fuel speculation about and undermine confidence in our law enforcement officials.”


____


Gillum reported from Washington.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Newtown 911 dispatcher urged callers to take cover

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

WRAPUP 3-ECB, urged by OECD to buy assets, says all options on the table

WRAPUP 3-ECB, urged by OECD to buy assets, says all options on the table
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/78f67__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif




Tue Nov 19, 2013 1:10pm EST



* OECD says ECB should buy bonds to counter deflation risk


* Vice-president says ECB has not discussed QE in detail


* ECB’s Praet says no deflation risk visible


* Asmussen says ECB ready to move again if inflation undershoots


By Robin Emmott and Sakari Suoninen


BRUSSELS/FRANKFURT, Nov 19 (Reuters) – All policy options are open for the European Central Bank and it has discussed the broad possibility of asset buying, its vice-president said, as the OECD urged it to consider such action to aid a weak recovery.


Paris-based think tank the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development called on the ECB on Tuesday to emulate U.S.-style quantitative easing, or QE, to help the single currency area avoid a Japanese-style deflationary spiral.


ECB Vice-President Vitor Constancio said the bank had discussed the possibility of QE but no technical planning work had taken place, though he added that “everything is possible”.


“All those instruments are on the table … but no decisions, we did what we did and that’s it,” he said, referring to a Nov. 7 decision to cut the bank’s key interest rate to a record low of 0.25 percent.


One of the euro zone central bank’s hawks, Joerg Asmussen, said separately that more policy action was possible if inflation continues to be well below the ECB’s target.


“Risks of deflation may be slowly increasing,” OECD chief economist Pier Carlo Padoan told Reuters. “The ECB must be very careful and be prepared to use even non-conventional measures to beat any risk of deflation becoming permanent.”


Inflation in the 17-nation euro zone fell to its lowest in nearly four years at just 0.7 percent in October, prompting the latest rate cut. The euro zone economy is struggling to recover from its longest ever recession, which ended in mid-year.


In an Austrian radio interview, ECB executive board member Asmussen, a German, said the bank could move again if necessary to keep inflation in the euro zone in line with its target of below but close to 2 percent.


“If the situation in inflation requires it, we can act again and one of the possible measures would be to use the so-called negative deposit rate,” he told public broadcaster ORF.


The deposit rate is now at zero. Cutting it further would mean banks would have to start paying to park their funds at the ECB overnight.


Asmussen said he would be “very, very careful” to deploy negative deposit rates, but he also did not want to rule it out completely. For now, he said, the risks to price stability were balanced and there was no risk of deflation in the euro zone.


The ECB’s economics chief, Peter Praet, who first put the possibility of QE on the agenda last week, also said on Tuesday that there was no risk of deflation visible in the euro area, and inflation expectations were firmly anchored.


“We had several episodes where we measured in market prices the fear of deflation, which we don’t see today,” Praet said at a Euro Finance Week conference in Frankfurt.


TOO EARLY


Asmussen reiterated the ECB’s stance that it is still too early to exit from the ECB’s loose monetary policy.


“Our monetary policy will remain expansionary for as long as needed,” Asmussen said.


Praet raised the possibility of QE in a Wall Street Journal interview last week, saying the central bank could use its balance sheet to prevent inflation under-shooting.


“This includes outright purchases that any central bank can do,” he said, without any public contradiction from ECB hawks.


Asked if the ECB had undertaken technical preparations for QE, Constancio told reporters in Frankfurt: “That was only referred to as a possibility, nothing else.”


“I have nothing to add to what he (Praet) said. Everything is possible. That was what Peter Praet said … it was not discussed in any detail.”


German Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann led a minority of about a quarter of the ECB governing council members who opposed the November rate cut, a source familiar with the decision said.


Another ECB source said the dissenters would have been willing to back a rate cut in December that might have included further monetary easing by ending a policy of “sterilising” past ECB purchases of euro zone government bonds.


That could free up another 200 billion euros of liquidity which the bank currently withdraws each week to compensate for purchases in 2010-11 of Greek, Portuguese, Irish, Spanish and Italian bonds under the now defunct securities market programme.


Praet acknowledged on Tuesday that growth was fragile, inflation low and credit subdued. “Things are improving, but it is still a fragile environment,” he said.


The U.S. Federal Reserve, Bank of England and Bank of Japan have all resorted to QE to revive economic growth since the global financial crisis of 2008 but such measures are extremely divisive among the 23 members of the ECB’s Governing Council.


One bank economist said a shift to a QE policy would be a game-changer for the euro zone.


“Should the ECB really go down the route of buying government bonds, it would be transformative,” said Greg Fuzesi at JP Morgan in London. “It would change perceptions of where the euro area is heading and could have a huge effect on the outlook.”






Reuters: Bonds News




Read more about WRAPUP 3-ECB, urged by OECD to buy assets, says all options on the table and other interesting subjects concerning Bonds at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Yosemite visitors urged to leave


Ari Bloomekatz
LA Times
Oct. 1, 2013


As Congress failed to agree on a budget and President Obama’s healthcare law, parts of the federal government have started shutting down, with stoppages felt by Southern California residents and across the nation.


One of the most jarring repercussions is the impending closure of 401 national parks that include Yosemite and Joshua Tree, among others.


“Anyone who’s hoping to arrive, even for a day visit, would see gates closed and would be turned away,” said Mike Litterst, a spokesman for the National Park Service. “There won’t be any access.”

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This article was posted: Tuesday, October 1, 2013 at 10:47 am


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Yosemite visitors urged to leave

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Frequent Rush Host Urged to Run Against Sen. Shaheen in N.H.

Would conservative writer and frequent Rush Limbaugh guest host Mark Steyn consider making a run for the U.S. Senate from New Hampshire?

The erudite political commentator and National Review columnist was rendered near speechless last week, laughing it off even as commentator Hugh Hewitt urged him to consider taking on Democrat Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, the Daily Caller reported.


“Don’t get me wrong, I love this state,” Steyn, 53, said. “Certainly I regret that Jeanne Shaheen was able to defeat John Sununu.”


Shaheen, 66, has served in the Senate since 2009 after leading New Hampshire as governor from 1997-2003.


Even as the discussion  a lot of laughs, Hewitt is pushing a SteynForSenate.com website where those who’d like to see Steyn run can contribute to a possible campaign.


The Canadian-born Steyn, a father of three, did not rule it out, lamenting that the field of Shaheen opponents left much to be desired.


“[M]y heart sank somewhat when I read in the Union Leader, I think it was the other day, about those who were preparing to run against Jeanne Shaheen for U.S. Senate seat,” Steyn said. “And I wish this state was the way it was 20 years ago, but the New Hampshire Republican Party was too often was content to be in office rather than in power. That’s a problem with the Republican Party generally, I feel.”


Steyn joked that his years as a writer offering up his opinion left him vulnerable to scrutiny. “One of the great things about writers running is they have hostages to fortune,” he said. “They don’t just have one damaging quote . . . they’ve like half a century of quotes.”


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – Politics



Frequent Rush Host Urged to Run Against Sen. Shaheen in N.H.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Jurors at Vicky Pryce retrial urged to "wipe the slate clean"

“In this trial the slate, as it were, is wiped clean, and you judge the case afresh based only on the evidence which unfolds before you during the course of the trial.

“The other jury’s disagreement is entirely irrelevant in this case.”

Prosecutor Andrew Edis told them: “It would be foolish for anyone to pretend that you are all entirely ignorant about the circumstances of this case. There is no such pretence.

“What his Lord has directed you and what we also urge you to do is to pay no heed at all to anything that you know about it up until now.

“It starts now, and what matters is what happens from now on.”

He court heard that Huhne’s BMW was clocked speeding at 11.23pm on March 12, 2003 as he returned from Stansted airport to London.

He said Huhne nominated his then-wife to take the points so he could avoid losing his licence and the pair had “cheated the system”.

Mr Edis said Pryce, of Crescent Grove, Clapham, south London, claimed a defence of marital coercion, requiring that her husband was present at the time and applied such pressure that she had no real choice.

He said: “She is not married to a lorry driver with five kids who would go hungry if he lost his job or anything of that kind.

“She was not threatened with violence or indeed threatened at all.”

He went on: “In 2002/3 Ms Pryce was a woman who had spent her life making important choices both in her own case and even for other people too because she was a very influential person who had had a glittering career as an economist in banking.”

She became chief economic adviser to the Department for Trade and Industry (DTI) in 2002, earning a six-figure sum – the first woman to be appointed to the post, he said.

“Women such as her have proudly led the struggle for equality with men over decades.

“They have won an equal right to choose what they do and here she is saying that she was unable to choose whether to commit a crime or not because a man, whether her husband or not, was telling her what she had to do.”

Mr Edis said Huhne left Pryce during half-time of a football match in June 2010, confessing to an affair before he was outed by a newspaper, then drafted a press statement and went to the gym.

He said it undoubtedly left her distressed: “But being the person that she is, a strong-minded, strong-willed person, it also caused her great anger and in the end led her to want to get revenge.

“And that is why actually we are all here, that’s why she is here, because she wanted to get revenge.”

He said it was after the Liberal Democrat party conference in September 2010, when press coverage of her attendance “tipped her over the edge”, that Pryce tried to reveal the story.

She contacted freelance journalist Andrew Alderson in November 2010, discussing a story – later found to be untrue – about a constituency aide taking points.

But the story was not published, despite efforts, and Pryce gave the story to Sunday Times political editor Isabel Oakeshott, Mr Edis said, whom she had met at the Lib Dem conference in September 2010.

Pryce confessed during a lunch on March 1 and email exchanges afterwards discussed how they could publish the story, with Ms Oakeshott suggesting the economist could inflict “maximum and perhaps fatal damage” on Huhne.

Pryce told the journalist: “I have no doubt as I definitely want to nail him, more than ever actually.”

Mr Edis told the jury: “She took the minor risk that Isabel Oakeshott had warned her about.

“She lit the blue touchpaper and she did that because she wanted to nail Mr Huhne.”

The court heard they also recorded conversations with Huhne in a bid to get “incontrovertible evidence”.

Mr Edis said: “There is no doubt that the end of her marriage was distressing, very upsetting, perhaps even heartbreaking.”

But he said she had “hatched quite a sophisticated plot to destroy his career whilst at the same time in quite a sophisticated way trying to save hers”.

He told the court that the points-swapping came about so busy Pryce would not be put to any inconvenience, and so Huhne could carry on with his career, and nobody would have found out if the economist’s “desire of vengeance had not overcome her better judgment”.


Crime News – UK Crime News


Jurors at Vicky Pryce retrial urged to "wipe the slate clean"