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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (854329)5/5/2015 1:33:10 AM
From: i-node2 Recommendations

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Brumar89
one_less

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578549
 
Nepotism? Really?

We've got a Secretary of Defense who, in too many cases to count, took money personally to deliver particular results for FOREIGN COUNTRIES.

And you're talking about nepotism?



To: tejek who wrote (854329)5/5/2015 1:36:04 AM
From: Broken_Clock  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578549
 
Corporate welfare at its finest….brought to one and all by the hypocritical D party. Kentucky was cited as a medicaid "victory" by dimwitted Democrats.

Contrary to goals, ER visits rise under Obamacare
Laura Ungar and Jayne O'Donnell, USA TODAY10:49 a.m. EDT May 4, 2015

Three-quarters of emergency physicians say they've seen ER patient visits surge since Obamacare took effect — just the opposite of what many Americans expected would happen.

A poll released today by the American College of Emergency Physicians shows that 28% of 2,099 doctors surveyed nationally saw large increases in volume, while 47% saw slight increases. By contrast, fewer than half of doctors reported any increases last year in the early days of the Affordable Care Act.

Such hikes run counter to one of the goals of the health care overhaul, which is to reduce pressure on emergency rooms by getting more people insured through Medicaid or subsidized private coverage and providing better access to primary care.

A major reason that hasn't happened is there simply aren't enough primary care physicians to handle all the newly insured patients, says ACEP President Mike Gerardi, an emergency physician in New Jersey.

"They don't have anywhere to go but the emergency room," he says. "This is what we predicted. We know people come because they have to."

Experts cite many root causes. In addition to the nation's long-standing shortage of primary care doctors — projected by the federal government to exceed 20,000 doctors by 2020 — some physicians won't accept Medicaid because of its low reimbursement rates. That leaves many patients who can't find a primary care doctor to turn to the ER — 56% of doctors in the ACEP poll reported increases in Medicaid patients.


Emergency room usage is bound to increase if there's a shortage of primary care doctors who accept Medicaid patients and "no financial penalty or economic incentive" to move people away from ERs, says Avik Roy, a health care policy expert with the free market Manhattan Institute.

"It goes to the false promise of the ACA," Roy says, that Medicaid recipients are "given a card that says they have health insurance, but they can't have access to physicians."

Complicating matters, low-income patients face many obstacles to care. They often can't take time off from work when most primary care offices are open, while ERs operate around the clock and by law must at least stabilize patients. Waits for appointments at primary care offices can stretch for weeks, while ERs must see patients almost immediately.

"Nobody wants to turn anyone away," says Maggie Gill, CEO of Memorial University Medical Center in Savannah, Ga. "But there's no business in this country that provides resource-intensive anything and can't even ask if you're going to be able to pay."

Some people who have been uninsured for years don't have regular doctors and are accustomed to using ERs, even though they are much more expensive. A 2013 report from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation says going to an ER when a primary care visit would suffice costs $580 more for each visit.

Damian Alagia, chief physician executive for KentuckyOne Health, says he's seen the trend play out in his large hospital system. There are more than a half-million people in the state newly insured through Obamacare. Many who put off care in the past now seek it in the place they know — the ER. "We're seeing an uptick pretty much across the system in our ERs," he says, calling the rise "significant" in both urban and rural hospitals.

Gerardi acknowledges that some people come to the ER for problems that would be better handled in a primary or urgent care office. But he says the ER is the right place for patients with vague but potentially life-threatening symptoms, such as chest pain, which could be anything from a heart attack to indigestion.

ER volumes are likely to keep climbing, and hospitals are working to adapt. Alagia says his ERs have care management professionals who connect patients with primary care physicians if they don't already have them. Gill says her Georgia hospital has a "whole staff in the emergency room dedicated to recidivism," who follow up with patients to see whether they've found a primary care doctor, are taking their medications or need help with transportation to get to doctors.

Still, seven in 10 doctors say their emergency departments aren't ready for continuing, and potentially significant, increases in volume. Although the numbers should level off as people get care to keep their illnesses under control, Alagia says, "the patient demand will outstrip the supply of physicians for a while."

usatoday.com



To: tejek who wrote (854329)5/5/2015 6:57:47 AM
From: longnshort1 Recommendation

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FJB

  Respond to of 1578549
 
Go Texas, they kick those muslim friends of your asses



To: tejek who wrote (854329)5/5/2015 11:14:05 AM
From: joseffy2 Recommendations

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FJB
locogringo

  Respond to of 1578549
 
Democrat Sheldon Silver, NY Assembly Speaker, Took Millions in Payoffs, U.S. Says
......................................................................................................
By WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM and THOMAS KAPLANJAN. 22, 2015
nytimes.com




Sheldon Silver, the speaker of the New York State Assembly, left the courthouse on Thursday in Manhattan. Credit Sam Hodgson for The New York Times


Sheldon Silver, the speaker of the New York Assembly, exploited his position as one of the most powerful politicians in the state to obtain millions of dollars in bribes and kickbacks, federal authorities said on Thursday as they announced his arrest on a sweeping series of corruption charges.

For years, Mr. Silver has earned a lucrative income outside government, asserting that he was a simple personal injury lawyer who represented ordinary people. But federal prosecutors said his purported law practice was a fiction, one he created to mask about $4 million in payoffs that he carefully and stealthily engineered for over a decade.

Mr. Silver, a Democrat from the Lower East Side of Manhattan, was accused of steering real estate developers to a law firm that paid him kickbacks. He was also accused of funneling state grants to a doctor who referred asbestos claims to a second law firm that employed Mr. Silver and paid him fees for referring clients.



“For many years, New Yorkers have asked the question: How could Speaker Silver, one of the most powerful men in all of New York, earn millions of dollars in outside income without deeply compromising his ability to honestly serve his constituents?” Preet Bharara, the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, asked at a news conference with F.B.I. officials. “Today, we provide the answer: He didn’t.”

The Case Against Sheldon Silver In the criminal complaint, prosecutors outlined what they called two central schemes used by Sheldon Silver to obtain bribes and kickbacks.


Scheme 1

$700,000 in Bribes and Kickbacks Mr. Silver was said to have persuaded developers who had business with the state to use a real estate law firm run by a former aide. The firm paid him $700,000 in fees.


Scheme 2

More Than $5.3 Million From Weitz & Luxenberg Mr. Silver was said to have directed $500,000 in state money to an unnamed doctor, who in return sent possible asbestos victims to the law firm Weitz & Luxenberg. He was paid $1.4 million in salary, and another $3.9 million in referral fees, and purported to work for the firm, but in fact “never performed any legal work whatsoever,” the prosecutors alleged.









Graphic: The Case Against Sheldon Silver Continue reading the main story




Document: Charges Against Sheldon Silver

The arrest of Mr. Silver, 70, immediately upended state government, throwing the capital into convulsions just as this year’s legislative session gets underway. The speaker since 1994, he has long been the most powerful Democrat in the Legislature, and he was expected to play a large role in the coming weeks as lawmakers tussle with Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo over the budget and contentious proposals regarding public schooling and criminal justice.

It also cast new attention on Mr. Cuomo’s decision to shut down the Moreland Commission, an anticorruption panel that he appointed in July 2013 but abruptly ended last March. On Thursday, lawmakers and lobbyists confronted what had previously seemed like an unfathomable prospect: The Legislature’s most immovable and unassailable leader, who has weathered repeated scandals and outlasted Democrats and Republicans alike, had become the latest in an embarrassing march of Albany lawmakers accused of corruption.

“As we are reminded today, those who make the laws don’t have the right to break the laws,” Richard Frankel, the special agent in charge of the Criminal Division of the New York office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, said at the news conference.

A federal magistrate judge issued seizure warrants to block Mr. Silver from access to $3.8 million that the speaker had spread among eight bank and asset-management accounts.

Mr. Silver appeared in Federal District Court in Lower Manhattan on Thursday afternoon. His lips pursed, he listened as Frank Maas, a federal magistrate judge, told him that he was prohibited from leaving the continental United States.

“Yes, sir,” Mr. Silver said when Judge Maas asked if he understood the conditions of his release — the only words Mr. Silver spoke during the brief hearing. He was released on a $200,000 personal recognizance bond and surrendered his passport.

(It was a stark change from a day earlier, when Mr. Cuomo, during his State of the State address, spoke of taking Mr. Silver and the leader of the State Senate on a series of international trade missions, including one to Mexico. The governor showed a doctored image depicting himself, Mr. Silver and the Senate leader, whom he nicknamed the Three Amigos, on horseback and wearing sombreros.)





Sheldon Silver, left, the speaker of the New York State Assembly, was arrested on Thursday in Manhattan. Credit Michael Appleton for The New York Times Mr. Silver moved gingerly out of the courtroom and bent over to sign a court illustrator’s sketch before saying, in the hallway, that he was innocent. “I’m confident that after a full hearing and a due process, I will be vindicated,” he said softly.

The arrest put the spotlight back on the spate of corruption scandals in Albany and immediately overshadowed the ambitious second-term agenda that Mr. Cuomo laid out in his speech. Several government watchdog groups responded to the arrest by calling for passage of new ethics measures.

Before Mr. Cuomo disbanded the anticorruption panel, it had sought to investigate the outside income of lawmakers; legislative leaders, including Mr. Silver, sued to block the inquiry.

The sudden closing led to a criminal investigation into the circumstances of the shutdown by Mr. Bharara’s office, which took over the commission’s cases and promised to continue its work. The case against Mr. Silver began in June 2013 and was aided by the Moreland Commission’s work.

The five-count criminal complaint runs to 35 pages and lays out the schemes in detail. It charges Mr. Silver with honest services mail and wire fraud, conspiracy to commit honest services mail fraud, extortion “under the color of law” — using his official position to commit extortion — and extortion conspiracy. If convicted, Mr. Silver faces a maximum of 20 years in prison for each count.

Mr. Silver’s profitable legal career — he reported earning more than $650,000 in 2013 — has long been viewed with suspicion in the capital, perhaps for good reason: Mr. Bharara’s office concluded that Mr. Silver received steady checks but performed no legal work for the money.

In one scheme described in court papers, he asked a pair of real estate developers to hire a small law firm, Goldberg & Iryami, which seeks reductions in New York City property taxes on behalf of its clients.

Continue reading the main story Video


Play Video|1:34 U.S. Attorney Announces Silver Charges


U.S. Attorney Announces Silver Charges
The United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, Preet Bharara, announces the charges against Sheldon Silver, the longtime Assembly speaker, who was arrested Thursday morning.

By AP on Publish Date January 22, 2015. Photo by Michael Appleton for The New York Times.
The firm was started by Jay Arthur Goldberg, who decades ago worked as a lawyer for the Assembly, according to state payroll records. Prosecutors said he was Mr. Silver’s counsel.

Mr. Silver received a slice of the legal fees paid to the firm, even though he did no work for the developers; prosecutors said he was paid about $700,000. He did not report the income on his annual financial disclosure forms submitted to the state.

One of the developers was Glenwood Management, according to people familiar with the matter. Glenwood develops luxury apartment buildings in Manhattan, has been an enormous contributor to state politicians and has a significant interest in matters before the Legislature, such as measures dealing with real estate taxation. While receiving fees from the real-estate law firm, Mr. Silver took actions that benefited the developers, prosecutors said.



An even more lucrative scheme, according to prosecutors, involved clients whom Mr. Silver referred to Weitz & Luxenberg, a large personal injury law firm where he has worked for more than a decade.

The referrals came from a doctor who directed possible asbestos victims to Weitz & Luxenberg. Mr. Silver then secretly funneled state grants, worth $500,000 in total, to finance the doctor’s research. The relationship was lucrative for Mr. Silver: He received more than $3 million in fees for the patients referred to Weitz & Luxenberg, prosecutors said.

The doctor, unnamed in the complaint, is Robert N. Taub, director of the Columbia University Mesothelioma Center, a person briefed on the investigation said. Dr. Taub did not respond to a requ



To: tejek who wrote (854329)5/5/2015 11:16:15 AM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

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FJB

  Respond to of 1578549
 
Democrat New York Assembly speaker arrested on graft charges
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02:11

Story highlightsOne of New York state's most powerful politicians arrested on graft chargesState Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver allegedly received $4M in bribes and kickbacksSilver: "I am confident ... I will be vindicated"

New York (CNN )New York State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver was arrested Thursday on charges that he used his position as one of the state's most-powerful politicians to amass millions of dollars in bribes and kickbacks, federal prosecutors said.

Silver's remarkable fall from grace came one day after he shared the stage with Gov. Andrew Cuomo during the State of the State address in Albany.

As Speaker of the Legislature's Democrat-controlled lower house, Silver held significant power over the operation of New York government, particularly over the real estate industry and health care funding.

Silver, 70, was taken into custody at about 8 a.m. Thursday by FBI agents and charged with two counts of "honest services fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit honest services fraud, one count of extortion under color of official right and one count of conspiracy to commit extortion under color of official right," said Preet Bharara, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York.

The charges, if resulting in a conviction, carry a maximum penalty of 100 years in prison.

Silver's attorneys, Joel Cohen and Steven Molo, said in a statement: "We're disappointed that the prosecutors have chosen to proceed with these meritless criminal charges. That said, Mr. Silver looks forward to responding to them -- in court -- and ultimately his full exoneration."

Silver, who was released on bail, spoke briefly to reporters as he left court.

"I am confident that when all the issues are aired, I will be vindicated," he said, according to CNN affiliate NY1.

In a criminal complaint, prosecutors said Silver abused his political influence and "obtained about $4 million in payments characterized as attorney referral fees solely through the corrupt use of his official position."

"We hold our elected representatives to the highest standards and expect them to act in the best interest of their constituents," FBI Special Agent-in-Charge Richard Frankel said in a statement. "In good faith, we trust they will do so while defending the fundamental tenets of the legal system. But as we are reminded today, those who make the laws don't have the right to break the laws."

Read the complaint

The lawmaker, who has been Assembly speaker for more than two decades, allegedly masked the payments from public scrutiny by disguising the graft as income from what he claimed was a personal injury law practice, according to the complaint.

"Over his decades in office, Speaker Silver has amassed titanic political power," Bharara told reporters. "During that same time, Silver also amassed a tremendous personal fortune."

The criminal complaint highlights the role of power and influence in what Bharara described as the "show-me-the-money culture of Albany."

"These charges go to the very core of what ails Albany -- a lack of transparency, lack of accountability, and lack of principle joined with an overabundance of greed, cronyism, and self-dealing," Bharara said in a statement.

The complaint outlined an elaborate, alleged corruption scheme driven by influence and greed, including the siphoning of state funds to a doctor referring cases to the law firm where Silver worked and securing tax breaks for real estate developers.


Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver and others congratulate New York Governor Andrew Cuomo after he signed the New York Secure Ammunition and Firearms Enforcement Act at the Capitol in Albany in 2013. REUTERS/Hans Pennink

The graft provided Silver about $700,000 in kickbacks from steering two real estate developers with business before the state to a law firm connected to the speaker, according to the complaint.

In addition, Silver allegedly collected more than $3 million in asbestos client referral fees. He received those fees by, among other official acts, awarding $500,000 in state grants to a university research center of a physician who referred patients with asbestos-related illnesses to Silver at the law firm where he worked, the complaint said.

Prosecutors also accuse Silver of actively interfering with the work of the state's Moreland Commission to Investigate Public Corruption so it would not learn of his illegal income, including negotiating with Cuomo to prematurely end the commission. The panel issued subpoenas seeking information on the the outside income earned by lawmakers.

Cuomo, a fellow Democrat, appointed members of the anti-corruption commission in 2013, but disbanded the panel one year later in exchange for changes in campaign finance reporting requirements and bribery laws for the Legislature, the complaint said.

Bharara said Cuomo's decision came as "great relief" to Silver.

Cuomo's office declined to comment but, in a meeting with the New York Daily News editorial board, the governor called Silver's arrest "a bad reflection on the government" and said the case against the speaker "vindicates" the commission's work.

Bharara told reporters that a number of other public corruption investigations were continuing. "You should stay tuned," he warned.

The state Assembly canceled its session on Thursday. Silver can continue to serve as speaker despite his arrest but would have to leave office if convicted of a felony, according to NY1.

Born on Manhattan's Lower East Side, Silver is a graduate of Yeshiva University and Brooklyn Law School.



To: tejek who wrote (854329)5/5/2015 11:25:39 AM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 1578549
 
Democrat Former N.Y. assembly speaker charged with corruption cnn.com

Joseph Spector, Gannett Albany Bureau 5:17 p.m. EST February 19, 2015


(Photo: AP Photo/Seth Wenig)



ALBANY, N.Y. -- Former New York Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver was indicted Thursday on corruption charges by a grand jury after he was arrested Jan. 22 for allegedly pocketing $4 million in a kickback scheme with two law firms over a decade.

Silve, 71, a Manhattan Democrat, was indicted on three charges: honest services mail fraud, honest services wire fraud and extortion under the color of his official duties.

The indictment said that since 2000, Silver "engaged in a secret and corrupt scheme to deprive the citizens of the state of his honest services as an elected legislator and as speaker of the Assembly by using the power and influence of his official position to obtain for himself millions of dollars in bribes and kickbacks masked as legitimate income earned by Silver as a private attorney."

Silver was arrested and served with a complaint by U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara that included five counts.

The arrest of Silver, who served as speaker since 1994, sent the state Capitol into turmoil, and he ultimately gave up his powerful post Feb. 2 after his Assembly Democratic colleagues pressured him to step down. Bronx Assemblyman Carl Heastie was elected as his successor, and Silver has remained a rank-and-file legislator, sitting in the back of the chamber and losing his large office in the Capitol.

Silver served as of counsel at the major law firm Weitz and Luxenberg, and Bharara accused Silver of providing state grants to a doctor in exchange for the doctor referring lucrative asbestos cases to the firm—with Silver getting a cut of the deals. With another law firm, Silver is accused of getting kickbacks in real-estate deals.

Silver has proclaimed his innocence, and Weitz and Luxenberg has denied any wrongdoing. Silver's arraignment had not been scheduled.

"Our client is not guilty. We can now begin to fight for his total vindication. We will do our fighting where it should be done: in court," Silver's attorneys, Joel Cohen and Steven Molo, said in a statement.

The indictment seeks to seize Silver's assets, as well as potentially having Silver's state pension forfeited -- which, like all state officials, is protected by the state constitution, even if they are found guilty of a crime.

Bharara has said that Silver's arrest as an indication that the state Capitol is mired in corruption. Nearly 40 lawmakers have been embroiled in ethical lapses since 2000.

"Over his decades in office, Speaker Silver has amassed titanic political power. But, as alleged, during that same time, Silver also amassed a tremendous personal fortune – through the abuse of that political power," Bharara said Jan. 22 when Silver was arrested.

The indictment said that Silver was able to shield his outside income from a corruption-busting panel shuttered by Gov. Andrew Cuomo last March. The panel, called the Moreland Commission, was looking into outside income of lawmakers; Bharara has picked up the cases and is also investigating Cuomo's decision to shut it down.

The arrest of Silver, one of the most powerful politicians in New York, has led to calls for ethics reforms from Cuomo and state lawmakers. Cuomo wants lawmakers to detail all of their outside income and state who their clients are, saying he would hold up a budget deal for the fiscal year that starts April 1 if he can't get the changes.

"Disclose your outside income and disclose who you represent, so the people know that it's not a conflict," Cuomo said Wednesday in the Bronx.