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To: DWB who wrote (4697)5/23/2002 11:42:27 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12247
 
AP News -- Eiffel Tower Ticket Scam Probed.

May 23, 2002

Eiffel Tower Ticket Scam Probed

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 5:02 p.m. ET

PARIS (AP) -- Paris prosecutors are investigating allegations that Eiffel Tower employees embezzled up to
$921,000 as part of a long-running ticket scam, judicial officials said Thursday.

The probe was opened on May 16 after city officials filed a lawsuit alleging that some workers manipulated
the tourist site's ticketing systems, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

As part of the alleged scam, employees would switch off the computer system, pass it off as a glitch and
pocket the money that visitors had paid to enter the tower, Le Parisien newspaper reported in early March.
City officials filed their complaint on Feb. 27. The paper reported that the scam took place over a nine-year
span.

Prosecutors are examining allegations that include ``abuse of confidence'' and ``receipt of stolen goods,'' the
officials said.

The city-run company that operates the tower has fired 16 employees in connection with the alleged scam,
the officials said.

Paris officials, who first believed the employees had pocketed up to $3.6 million in the scam, reduced their
estimate to $921,000 after a city investigation.

About 6.1 million tourists visited the Eiffel Tower last year, reaping revenues of nearly $45 million.

Copyright 2002 The Associated Press



To: DWB who wrote (4697)5/24/2002 9:54:38 AM
From: DWB  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 12247
 
In a parallel universe, Sept. 11 never happened
By Kathleen Parker

Congress seeks to oust Bush following racial
profiling fiasco, police state maneuvers

WASHINGTON (XYZ Wire Service) - Congressional
leaders are scrambling to begin impeachment
proceedings against President George W. Bush
following several unprecedented federal security measures
that critics say constitute an unconscionable assault on
American civil liberties. Wall Street, meanwhile, is reeling from
a seismic downturn while the airline industry is predicted to
topple.

The Bush administration's sudden imposition of several new -
some say "terrifying" - policies came on the heels of an
alleged FBI warning that radical Muslim terrorists were
planning to hijack U.S. commercial airliners. In the past 36
hours, Bush has taken several steps that have sent American
citizens and institutions into shock.

Federal officials have:

- Detained and begun questioning about two dozen aviation
students who are of Arab or Middle Eastern descent,
prompting the Arab-American and Muslim communities to
organize massive protests in several cities.

- Posted military personnel in airports and imposed extensive
personal searches that have forced long lines, delays and
charges of racial profiling as travelers who appear to be of
Middle Eastern descent have been targeted by security
inspectors.

- Ordered a tightening of borders and alerted immigration
personnel to be on the lookout for suspicious activities,
especially among Middle Easterners.

As one TV pundit observed, there hasn't been this much furor
in the nation's capital since the days of Vietnam War
protesters. "This is insanity, this is an outrage," said
Democratic leader Rep. Richard Gephardt on CNN's
"Crossfire."

U.S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney, D-Ga., has charged Bush with
racial profiling. She has asked for an investigation into the FBI
report that prompted these measures, saying that the report
was too "vague" to justify any government action.

In a radio interview, McKinney suggested that the Bush
administration was fictionalizing a terrorist threat in order to
justify imposing his conservative domestic agenda on an
unsuspecting America. "I'm not saying he made it up; I'm just
saying that an investigation might show that he did," said
McKinney.

Responding to such attacks, the White House is urging
Americans to be patient.

"We understand Americans' concern; President Bush did not
take these steps without careful consideration," said White
House press secretary Ari Fleischer. "Given that American
lives were at stake, President Bush felt he had no choice."

The security threat to which Bush allegedly was responding
came in the form of a memo to the president during a routine
daily briefing while Bush was vacationing at his home in
Crawford, Texas. Bush had requested an intelligence analysis
of possible attacks by "al-Qaida," a radical Muslim terrorist
organization headed by a wealthy Saudi Arabian exile named
Osama bin Laden.

Bush specifically was interested in possible attacks on American soil, as most
intelligence reports previously had focused on threats against U.S. targets overseas.
Al-Qaida groups, which operate as small cells, claimed responsibility for several
attacks on American targets during the Clinton administration. According to White
House sources, Bush was concerned that bin Laden and al-Qaida had not been taken
seriously enough during the previous administration.

The new report said that bin Laden followers might seek to hijack U.S. airliners.

"So what?" demanded McKinney. "Since when don't we know that terrorists might seek
to hijack U.S. airliners? It's cold in Alaska, too. Did anybody mention that?"

Fleischer noted during a press conference that another FBI memo, written in July,
mentioned that two students at an Arizona flight school were thought to be linked to
al-Qaida.

"President Bush merely connected the dots," said Fleischer. "When you have two
possible al-Qaida members training to fly airplanes in the U.S., combined with
information that bin Laden may be targeting American airliners, you can't just hope
nothing bad will happen. You have to act, and that's exactly what the president did."

The Muslim American Society and The Council on American Islamic Relations joined
McKinney yesterday at a rally in front of the Lincoln Memorial to demand Bush's
impeachment. McKinney has accepted campaign contributions from dozens of
Muslim-Americans, some of whom also have donated to terrorist organizations.

"Just because two flight students are 'thought' to be members of al-Qaida, Bush is
rounding up Muslims?" McKinney said at the rally. "Can anybody say, 'racial profiling'?

"African-Americans cannot stand by and let this happen to people of color. When you
start rounding up men of Middle Eastern descent just because some terrorists happen
to be of Middle Eastern descent, that's not 'connecting the dots,' my fellow Americans,
that's tightening the noose!"

Bush will address the nation tonight at 8 on all major networks. At 9 p.m. CNN's "Larry
King Live" will air a live interview with special guest Osama bin Laden.