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To: Susan G who wrote (5353)5/24/2001 2:34:40 AM
From: Frederick Langford  Respond to of 5732
 
Cabal of lawyers drives Bush further to right
The Bush Files

Ed Vulliamy
Sunday April 29, 2001
The Observer

George W. Bush's administration - 100 days old today - is being hailed as his country's most ideologically right-wing of the past 100 years, across a spectrum of policies ranging from the environment to labour, civil rights to social issues.
But the rip tide that cuts beneath all Bush's plans to transform the landscape, with more durable results than any other policy, is the hijacking - behind closed doors - of the US judiciary.

The administration - to which power was in effect granted by the Supreme Court in a controversial ruling last December - is preparing not only to set the highest court in the land on course for a conservative generation, but has quietly revolutionised the way in which all federal judges are appointed to benches across the country, guaranteeing politically right-wing selections.

At the core of this manoeuvre, which will weave a new fabric in US society, is a tightly organised right-wing lawyers' group which has come in from the fringes to the core of the administration.

It is called the Federalist Society, of which Bush's Solicitor General Theodore Olson, Interior Secretary Gale Norton, Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham and Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Orrin Hatch are leading members - as are many members of the new White House counsel team.

Stalwart conservative judges on the Supreme Court Anthony Scalia and Clarence Thomas are patrons and guests of the group, and Attorney General John Ashcroft is a close affiliate.

The emergence of the Federalists is traced in a study by the New York-based Institute for Democracy Studies, which concludes that 'extreme conservative organisations sponsoring a combination of right-wing litigation and advocacy are opening the way for a radical transformation of the American legal system'.

Ralph Neas, President of the Washington think-tank People for the American Way, says that 'the White House counsel's office and the Department of Justice are being turned over to the Federalist Society, a bastion of far-right legal thought'.

The Federalist Society's philosophy underpins, and is ready to steer, all the administration's cornerstone policies on deregulation of environmental and labour law, education, civil rights and abortion. The author of the IDS study, Julie Gerchik, says that 'the agenda is to dismantle everything built since the New Deal'. There was even a Federalist panel in Chicago on 28 March entitled 'Rolling Back the New Deal'.

'Where is the divide between politics and the law here?' says Gerchik. 'This is politics enforced by legal mechanisms.'

The society has already had an impact on major decisions: when Bush pulled America out of the Kyoto treaty on climate change, he did so after reading what he called 'important new information'. That information was a report commissioned by David McIntosh, a Federalist Society founder, arguing that toxic emissions were exaggerated and warning of costs to business.

But above all, the society has ousted the legal establishment which - in the form of the profession's traditional representative body, the American Bar Association - has helped oversee the selection of judges and guarantee the profession's integrity for five decades.

Since Eisenhower, the ABA has had a semi-official role in advising on judicial appointments. But in a sudden, little-noticed move last month, President Bush cut the ABA entirely out of the appointment process. The Federalists were delighted, having for years targeted the association (in a special publication, ABA Watch) for such issues as its support for gun control and opposition to the death penalty.

The ABA's removal creates a vacuum in the recommendation of judges, and into it has moved a 15-person committee formed between the White House and Justice Department urgently to seek candidates for some 100 vacancies to federal benches (one-eighth of all judges).

This recommending committee is firmly in the hands of the Federalist Society, controlled by Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson, a society member, and others. Sources add that some 70 judges have so far been interviewed, a quarter of them recommended by the Federalist Society.

The society was founded 20 years ago with a mission to beat back what it saw as a liberal orthodoxy permeating public policy and the courts since the Civil Rights movement.

Society members propelled the attempted impeachment of President Clinton over the Lewinsky scandal. Prosecutor Kenneth Starr was an active member, as were many of his team.

Its major benefactor is the Scaife Foundation, controlled by billionaire conservative magnate Richard Mellon Scaife, who deploys his fortunes to advance right-wing causes. Among those causes was the 'Arkansas Project', initiated by Scaife at a cost of $24 million to mount the suit by Paula Jones - and eventually Lewinsky - against the President.

The first meeting between Scaife and the 'Arkansas Project' was chaired by Theodore Olson, who steered it and is now Solicitor General of the US, the country's most influential lawyer, head of the Federalist Society's Washington chapter, based in the White House.

Olson cut his teeth under Starr in the Reagan administration, and was counsel to Reagan during the Iran-Contra affair. He was himself investigated (but not indicted) by a special prosecutor for lying to Congress, and went on to become chairman of the American Spectator magazine, which 'broke' the Paula Jones story. His wife Barbara is a pivot of the Washington right-wing social circuit, herself chairwoman of a conservative women's organisation funded by Scaife.

From this background, Olson emerged into the public glare as George Bush's knight and mouthpiece, triumphantly arguing the President's case against the Florida recounts in the Supreme Court and ultimately winning him the election.

The Federalists' other channel to power has been through clerkships at the Supreme Court under sympathetic judges Scalia, Thomas, Kennedy - and Chief Justice William Rehnquist.

Many saw Bush's victory as a watershed moment when the judges put politics above the law. But it is to the future of the court over the next four years - and thence a generation - that the Federalists are looking.

The backgrounds of the Supreme Court's main conservatives are contentious: Justice Rehnquist was author of the memo during the historic Brown vs. Board of Education case in 1952 supporting racial segregation, saying: 'It is about time the court faced the fact that white people in the South don't like the coloured people'.

But Rehnquist and the court's other conservatives have always toiled in counterpoint with liberal appointees and moderate Republicans. However, only this week, a 5-4 verdict on an apparently innocuous case about driving licences in Alabama cut a major inroad into the 1964 Civil Rights Act, ruling that individuals cannot now sue federal agencies over discrimination cases.

In the hands of Bush's legal team now are two possible appointments during his term of office which could swing the court decisively to the right.

The Federalists are not the only group taking care to ensure a conservative federal judiciary. Three right-wing organisations funded by the Scaife Foundation have organised a series of junkets so that judges can attend political seminars on the advantages of deregulation in environment, labour and civil rights law.

They are the Law and Economics Centre, the Liberty Fund and FREE - the Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment, which funded all-expenses-paid trips, some lasting as long as two weeks, to luxury venues, featuring golf and horse-riding for the justices.

As well as money from the ubiquitous Scaife family, both the FREE and the LEC trips for judges are bountifully funded by oil giants Shell and Exxon, and Philip Morris cigarettes.

Many of the judges who enjoyed them failed - by their own admission - to disclose these junkets on their annual financial reports, as required by their own federal ethics laws, according to the Washington-based watchdog group Community Rights Counsel.

The CRC found that judges' attendance at the junket seminars 'increased significantly between 1992 and 1998' with a record 88 judges taking trips in 1998. With 800 active judges at any time, this means that about 10 per cent of the federal judiciary takes a trip each year.

An exhaustive study by the CRC of seminars and subsequent verdicts by judges who attended them finds 'doctrinal shifts' and 'considerable evidence that the education judges receive' has led to 'a strand of judicial activism that is distinctly pro-market, clearly hostile to federal environmental regulations and decidedly in keeping with the curriculum of FREE seminars'.

observer.co.uk



To: Susan G who wrote (5353)5/24/2001 8:15:25 AM
From: wgh613  Respond to of 5732
 
TIVO,

TiVo Granted Patent on Personal Video Recording Software and Hardware Design
Significant Patent Grants TiVo License for Key Personal Video Recording Technologies
SAN JOSE, Calif., May 24, 2001 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- TiVo Inc. (Nasdaq: TIVO chart, msgs), the creator of and leader in personal television, today announced the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has issued to TiVo a patent that covers many of the key inventions associated with personal video recording software and hardware design.

TiVo was formed on a foundation of significant technology developments and engineering that is unique in the landscape of technology art and sets TiVo apart from its competitors. As the first to market with the product and service now commonly referred to as a Personal Video Recorder or Digital Video Recorder, TiVo has defined the category and built a brand whose qualities exemplify the market overall. The TiVo brand is backed by significant inventions that were filed with the patent office long before consumers recognized the technology and its benefits. The USPTO issued patent number 6,233,389 to TiVo for a "Multimedia Timewarping System," originally filed in July of 1998.

"We are pleased that TiVo is receiving formal recognition for the invention of unique and novel technologies -- underpinning the making of Personal Video Recording devices. We realize that delivering a compelling and easy to use product and service to the market demands a new level of technological aptitude," said Jim Barton, Chief Technology Officer for TiVo. "TiVo's aptitude in this regard will become increasingly apparent as our patent portfolio grows over time. From the inception of the company, we have placed great emphasis on developing and protecting our intellectual properties including patents, copyrights, trademarks and trade secrets."

This patent discloses all aspects of the design and construction of the TiVo Receiver/Recorder. Key inventions in the patent include:

-- a method for recording one program while playing back another or
watching a program as it is recording, often referred to as
time-shifting the program;
-- a method for efficient and low-cost processing and synchronizing of the
various multimedia streams in a television signal such as video, audio
and closed-captioning, and
-- a storage format that easily supports advanced Trickplay capabilities.
Trickplay includes pausing the live TV broadcast, fast-forwarding,
rewinding, instant replays and slow motion.

This is one of many patents filed by TiVo. In addition to the patent above, TiVo has been issued patent 6,215,526, which describes a method for embedding data within a television signal in such a way that it survives analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog conversion during the transmission process. TiVo owns design patents for its award winning remote control and the design for the integrated DIRECTV Receiver with TiVo. These patents are issued as Remote Control design patents: D424,061, D431,552, Remote Control housing design patents: D424,577, D435,403 and DIRECTV Receiver with TiVo bezel design patent: D434,043. TiVo also has pending applications that cover the end-to-end features and functions of the TiVo Service.

The patents have also been examined and approved under the terms of the Patent Convention Treaty (PCT), which provides for nominal acceptance of the patent in countries that are signatories to the treaty, which includes most countries in the world. TiVo is currently filing for acceptance in key countries around the world.

About TiVo, Inc.

TiVo is the creator of and leader in personal television. Founded in 1997 with the mission to dramatically improve consumers' television viewing experiences, TiVo developed a technology that serves as a platform for delivering a variety of home entertainment services. TiVo's Personal TV Service(TM) simplifies the way we watch and enjoy television by digitally recording television shows, without videotape, so you can watch what you want, when you want to watch it. TiVo was the first to deliver on the promise of consumer choice and control over TV viewing, building a loyal and passionate subscriber base. TiVo's leadership is grounded in its ability to forge critical partnerships, working together with the giants of the media, technology, consumer electronics, and television industries. Industry support of TiVo is reflected in its partner roster that includes, AOL, BSkyB, DIRECTV, Philips, SONY, Thomson and the leading cable and network television companies. Today, the TiVo Service is available in the United States on the Philips Personal TV Recorder(TM) and the Sony Digital Network Recorder (TM) in nearly 3500 consumer electronics retail and online outlets and in the UK under the Thomson Scenium brand. TiVo is headquartered in San Jose, CA. Additional information can be found at tivo.com .

This release may contain forward-looking statements regarding TiVo's business, customers or other factors that may affect future earnings or financial results. Such statements involve risks and uncertainties, which could cause actual results to vary materially from those, expressed in or indicated by the forward-looking statements. Factors that may cause actual results to differ materially include delays in development, competitive service offerings and lack of market acceptance. These risks and uncertainties are more fully described in the TiVo Annual Report on Form 10-K for the period ended December 31, 1999 and Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2000 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission



To: Susan G who wrote (5353)5/24/2001 12:55:19 PM
From: SusieQ1065  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5732
 
Nice call on TIVO, Sus....

More cheapies in play...BLUE...FIBR...TUTR...DIGX...EMIS..

;-)



To: Susan G who wrote (5353)5/24/2001 3:38:43 PM
From: keithcray  Respond to of 5732
 
TIVO and FIBR on fire. The two Suzie's strike again!

;0)