Saturday, June 22, 2013

US prosecuted Nazi propagandists as war criminals: The Nuremberg tribunal and the role of the media

US prosecuted Nazi propagandists as war criminals

By David Walsh
16 April 2003
The ongoing US aggression in the Middle East raises the most serious questions about the role of the mass media in modern society. In the period leading up to the invasion, the American media uncritically advanced the Bush administration’s arguments, rooted in lies, distortions and half-truths, for an attack on Iraq. It virtually excluded all critical viewpoints, to the point of blacking out news of mass antiwar demonstrations and any other facts that contradicted the propaganda from the White House and Pentagon.
The obvious aim was to misinform and manipulate public opinion, and convince the tens of millions within the US who were opposed to the administration’s war policy that they constituted a small and helpless minority.
Now, as if on cue, the US media has obediently turned its attention to Syria, evidently the next target of the US military. If the focus of the White House and Pentagon should shift to North Korea or Iran, the appropriate items will begin to appear about the dire threat represented by those regimes to the security of the American people.
In the American media there is barely a trace of serious analysis concerning the political and social realities of the Middle East. It long ago abandoned any sense of responsibility for educating and informing the public or carrying out the critical democratic function traditionally assigned to the “Fourth Estate,” i.e., serving as a watchdog and check on government abuses and falsifications. Instead it slavishly carries out the function assigned it by the ruling elite: to confuse, terrorize and intimidate the American public, rendering it less able to resist the reactionary program of the right-wing clique in Washington.
The television networks and leading newspapers are the prime source of news and information for tens of millions of people in the US. However, these public resources are in the hands of giant firms, controlled by fabulously wealthy individuals who will stop at nothing to defend their profits and property. The corpses of thousands, or, if necessary, millions of Iraqis, Syrians, Iranians and others are a small price to pay, as far as the media billionaires are concerned, for achieving American military and economic domination of the globe.
This makes the US media an accessory before and after the fact to crimes carried out in Iraq and future crimes against other peoples in the region and around the world. Sitting far from the ravaged Iraqi cities, in well-appointed boardrooms, the media moguls may believe they will never face such charges. There are, however, historical parallels and precedents to the contrary.
The Nuremberg precedent
The role of propaganda and propagandists figured prominently at the Nuremberg war crimes tribunal, convened to render judgment on the Nazi leaders following World War II. The tribunal was an institution organized by the victorious Allied governments, serving in the final analysis the ruling classes of those countries.
Nonetheless, in their arguments US prosecutors set forth a democratic legal principle derived from the international experience of a half-century of carnage: that planning and launching an aggressive war constituted a criminal act and that those who helped prepare such a war through their propaganda efforts were as culpable as those who drew up the battle plans or manufactured the munitions.
The case made against Hans Fritzsche, one of the individuals chiefly responsible for Nazi newspaper and radio propaganda, is particularly significant. Fritzsche, born in Bochum, Westphalia in 1900, served in the German army in World War I and studied liberal arts at university, but left without a degree. He began a career as a journalist working for the Hugenberg Press, a newspaper chain that supported the right-wing “national” parties, including the Nazis.
Fritzsche began commenting on radio in September 1932, discussing political events on his own weekly program, “Hans Fritzsche Speaks.” That same year the regime of Franz von Papen appointed him head of the Wireless [Radio] News Department, a government agency. Fritzsche was generally sympathetic to the Nazi cause, but not a member of the party.
Underlining the importance with which the Hitlerites viewed radio as an instrument of propaganda, on the evening that the Nazis came to power, January 30, 1933, two emissaries of Joseph Goebbels, soon to be minister of propaganda and enlightenment, paid Fritzsche a visit. The latter was allowed to stay on as head of the Wireless Radio Department despite his rejection of certain conditions set by Goebbels, including the immediate firing of all Jews and all those who refused to join the Nazi Party.
The Nuremberg prosecution case against Fritzsche notes: “Fritzsche continued to make radio broadcasts during this period in which he supported the National Socialist [Nazi] coalition government then still existing.”
In April 1933, Goebbels paid Fritzsche a personal visit and informed him of the decision to place the Wireless News Service under the jurisdiction of the newly created Propaganda Ministry as of May 1, 1933. Apparently satisfied with the results of the first meeting, Goebbels arranged a second at which Fritzsche informed the propaganda minister of the steps he had taken to “reorganize and modernize” the agency, including ridding it of Jewish employees.
“Goebbels thereupon informed Fritzsche that he would like to have him reorganize and modernize the entire news services of Germany within the control of the Propaganda Ministry. ... He [Fritzsche] proceeded to conclude the Goebbels-inspired reorganization of the Wireless News Service and, on 1 May 1933, together with the remaining members of his staff, he joined the Propaganda Ministry. On this same day he joined the NSDAP [Nazi Party] and took the customary oath of unconditional loyalty to the Fuehrer.”
After entering the Propaganda Ministry, Fritzsche went to work for its “German Press Division.” From 1933 to 1942 Fritzsche held various positions in that department, heading it for the four years during which the Nazi regime launched its invasions of neighboring countries. The Nuremberg prosecution argued: “By virtue of its functions, the German Press Division became an important and unique instrument of the Nazi conspirators, not only in dominating the minds and psychology of Germans, but also as an instrument of foreign policy and psychological warfare against other nations.”
According to Fritzsche’s own affidavit: “During the whole period from 1933 to 1945 it was the task of the German Press Division to supervise the entire domestic press and to provide it with directives by which this division became an efficient instrument in the hands of the German State leadership. More than 2,300 German daily newspapers were subject to this control. ... The head of the German Press Division held daily press conferences in the Ministry for the representatives of all German newspapers. Hereby all instructions were given to the representatives of the press.”
The prosecution case: propaganda as an instrument of aggression
The prosecution case, argued by Drexel Sprecher, an American, placed considerable stress on the role of media propaganda in enabling the Hitler regime to prepare and carry out aggressive wars. “The use made by the Nazi conspirators of psychological warfare is well known. Before each major aggression, with some few exceptions based on expediency, they initiated a press campaign calculated to weaken their victims and to prepare the German people psychologically for the attack. They used the press, after their earlier conquests, as a means for further influencing foreign politics and in maneuvering for the following aggression.”
Fritzsche was named head of the German Press Division in 1938 after the “primitive military-like” methods of his predecessor, Alfred Ingemar Berndt, created “a noticeable crisis in confidence of the German people in the trustworthiness of its press,” in Fritzsche’s words.
The Nuremberg prosecutor detailed the propaganda campaigns taken up by the German media, under Fritzsche’s immediate supervision, in relation to various acts of foreign aggression, including the incorporation of Bohemia and Moravia (1939) and the invasions of Poland (1939) and Yugoslavia and the USSR (1941).
The Nazi press propaganda campaign preceding the invasion of Poland involved manufacturing or manipulating complaints of the German minority in that country. Fritzsche explains: “Concerning this the leading German newspapers, upon the basis of directions given out in the so-called ‘daily parole,’ brought out the following publicity with great emphasis: (1) cruelty and terror against Germans and the extermination of Germans in Poland; (2) forced labor of thousands of German men and women in Poland; (3) Poland, land of servitude and disorder; the desertion of Polish soldiers; the increased inflation in Poland; (4) provocation of frontier clashes upon direction of the Polish Government; the Polish lust to conquer; (5) persecution of Czechs and Ukrainians by Poland.”
In regard to the Nazi propaganda surrounding the Yugoslav events, the prosecutor noted the “customary definitions, lies, incitement and threats, and the usual attempt to divide and weaken the victim.”
Fritzsche describes how he received instructions on the eve of the invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941: “[Foreign Minister Joachim von] Ribbentrop informed us that the war against the Soviet Union would start that same day and asked the German press to present the war against the Soviet Union as a preventative war for the defense of the Fatherland, as a war which was forced upon us through the immediate danger of an attack of the Soviet Union against Germany. The claim that this was a preventative war was later repeated by the newspapers which received their instructions from me during the usual daily parole of the Reich Press Chief. I, myself, have also given this presentation of the cause of the war in my regular broadcasts.”
Thus, the presentation of an illegal invasion of a foreign country as a “preventative” or pre-emptive war did not originate with Bush, Cheney or Rumsfeld.
The prosecution in the Fritzsche case raised an issue that is of the greatest relevance today: the role of Nazi media propaganda in inuring the German population to the sufferings of other peoples and, indeed, urging Germans to commit war crimes. It argued: “Fritzsche incited atrocities and encouraged a ruthless occupation policy. The results of propaganda as a weapon of the Nazi conspirators reaches into every aspect of this conspiracy, including the atrocities and ruthless exploitation in occupied countries. It is likely that many ordinary Germans would never have participated in or tolerated the atrocities committed throughout Europe, had they not been conditioned and goaded by the constant Nazi propaganda. The callousness and zeal of the people who actually committed the atrocities was in large part due to the constant and corrosive propaganda of Fritzsche and his official associates.”
The American media today reports poll results indicating that 60 or 70 percent of the population supports the war against Iraq. Such polls are not conducted by disinterested bodies for the purpose of advancing sociological knowledge. The manner in which the interviewees are selected and the questions formulated has a considerable impact on the results obtained. The powers that be in America have every interest in maintaining the fiction of a nation united behind its president and armed forces. In reality, there is widespread hostility and opposition to the war and to the Bush administration, which finds no expression in the media, the Democratic Party or any other official American institution.
Nonetheless, there is a constituency for war among the more backward layers of the population. Aside from the relatively small number of right-wing fanatics, who would be in favor of war against almost anyone, including a good section of their fellow Americans, those in favor of the assault on Iraq believe a) that the Saddam Hussein regime had a hand in the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack on New York City and Washington; b) that the Iraqis possessed “weapons of mass destruction,” which they intended to use against their neighbors or the US at some future point; and/or c) that the Iraqi population desired “liberation” at the hands of the US military.
While it is outside the scope of this article to expound on this, all three claims have been proven to be lies by the events of the war itself and will be further exposed by future developments. If many Americans, however, believe these arguments, with all the tragic consequences for the Iraqi and other peoples, how is that to be accounted for? Clearly, by “the constant and corrosive propaganda” of the US media over the course of months and even years, dating back to the first Gulf war. The media’s very success in manipulating public opinion is one of the strongest proofs of its culpability in the commission of war crimes.
It is worth quoting extensively from the Fritzsche prosecutor’s conclusion, for it sheds considerable light on the role of the media in the modern age, as well as the democratic sensibilities of those pursuing the Nazi war criminals, sensibilities that no longer carry any weight within US ruling circles.
“Fritzsche was not the type of conspirator who signed decrees, or who sat in the inner councils planning the overall grand strategy. The function of propaganda is, for the most part, apart from the field of such planning. The function of a propaganda agency is somewhat more analogous to an advertising agency or public relations department, the job of which is to sell the product and to win the market for the enterprise in question. Here the enterprise was the Nazi conspiracy. In a conspiracy which depends upon fraud as a means, the salesmen of the conspiratorial group are quite as essential and culpable as the master planners, even though they may not have contributed substantially to the formulation of all the basic strategy, but rather concentrated on making the execution of this strategy possible. In this case, propaganda was a weapon of tremendous importance to this conspiracy. Furthermore, the leading propagandists were major accomplices in this conspiracy, and Fritzsche was one of them...
“Fritzsche learned a lesson from his predecessor, Berndt, who fell from the leadership of the German Press Division partly because he over-played his hand by blunt and excessive manipulation of the Sudetenland propaganda. Fritzsche stepped into the gap caused by the loss of confidence of both the editors and the German people, and did his job with more skill and subtlety. His shrewdness and ability to be more assuring and ‘to find,’ as Goebbels said, ‘willing ears of the whole nation,’—these things made him the more useful accomplice of the conspirators...
“Fritzsche is not in the dock as a free journalist but as a propagandist who helped substantially to tighten the Nazi stranglehold over the German people, who made the excesses of the conspirators palatable to the German people, who goaded the German nation to fury and crime against people they were told by him were subhuman.
“Without the propaganda apparatus of the Nazi State, the world would not have suffered the catastrophe of these years, and it is because of Fritzsche’s role in behalf of the Nazi conspirators, and their deceitful and barbarous practices, that he is called to account before the International Military Tribunal.”
The tribunal found Fritzsche not guilty on the dubious grounds that he had not had sufficient stature to formulate or originate the propaganda campaigns undertaken by the Nazi regime. It also asserted that the prosecution had not proven that Fritzsche was aware of the extermination of the Jews or had spread news he knew to be false. (Fritzsche was immediately rearrested and charged by German courts with various crimes. He was sentenced to nine years at hard labor, left prison in 1950 and died of cancer three years later.)
The prosecution, in its reply to the “Unfounded Acquittal of Defendant Fritzsche,” returned insistently and pointedly to its arguments. It noted that the verdict failed to take into account that Fritzsche was until 1942 “the Director de facto of the Reich Press and that, according to himself, subsequent to 1942, he became the ‘Commander-in-Chief of the German radio.’”
The prosecution went on: “For the correct definition of the role of defendant Hans Fritzsche it is necessary, firstly, to keep clearly in mind the importance attached by Hitler and his closest associates (as Goering, for example) to propaganda in general and to radio propaganda in particular. This was considered one of the most important and essential factors in the success of conducting an aggressive war.”
In Hitler’s Germany, the reply to the verdict continues, “propaganda was invariably a factor in preparing and conducting acts of aggression and in training the German populace to accept obediently the criminal enterprises of German fascism. ...
“The basic method of the Nazi propagandistic activity lay in the false presentation of facts. ... The dissemination of provocative lies and the systematic deception of public opinion were as necessary to the Hitlerites for the realization of their plans as were the production of armaments and the drafting of military plans. Without propaganda, founded on the total eclipse of the freedom of press and of speech, it would not have been possible for German Fascism to realize its aggressive intentions, to lay the groundwork and then to put to practice the war crimes and the crimes against humanity. In the propaganda system of the Hitler State it was the daily press and the radio that were the most important weapons.”
There is little to be added to this condemnation. While all historical analogies have their limits, the indictment of the German media chief for war crimes speaks with great force to the role of the US media barons in contemporary world affairs.

21 Arrested as Progressive Groups Turn Wrath on NYS Senate's Independent

There were several arrests at the New York State Capitol Tuesday. Advocates took out their anger and frustration on Cuomo and leaders of the State Senate, after it became clear that a progressive agenda that includes abortion rights and public campaign financing are likely dead for the legislative session.

Credit Karen DeWitt
New York State NOW President Zenaida Mendez, being arrested at a sit in outside Sen Klein's offices Tuesday afternoon.

Government reform groups are angry at Governor Cuomo, saying he is giving up too soon on an anti corruption agenda that includes public financing of campaigns and greater prosecution powers for the state’s District Attorneys.   Susan Lerner is with Common Cause.

“It’s too early to wave a white flag,” Lerner said. “The finish line is the end of the day on Thursday. Don’t stop running the race now.”
But most of the advocates of public campaign financing,  abortion rights, decriminalizing small amounts of marijuana, and other progressive issues reserved their wrath for the leaders of a breakaway Democratic faction that governs the Senate along with the Republicans.

They held a sit down protest outside the office door of Senator Jeff Klein, the leader of the Senate’s Independent Democratic Conference, also known as the IDC. They Klein, demanded that the bills be put on the floor for a vote, and accusing the IDC of abandoning their issues.

“IDC means ‘I don’t care’,” the protesters chanted.

Police moved in, and 21 people were arrested, including several  leaders of the reform group Citizen Action, and the President of New York State chapter of the National Organization for Women, Zenaida Mendez.

Senator Klein, speaking before the sit in, says he thinks it’s ironic that the advocates are blaming the only faction of Senators who all actually support their agenda.

“It’s very interesting that you hammer someone who advocates your position,” said Klein, who says he is solidly prochoice.

“The last time I checked, I have not seen a Republican stand up and say that they are prochoice to make up for the lack of votes on the Democratic side,” Klein said.

Senator Klein says the Senate IDC and the Republicans are prepared to vote on an alternative women’s agenda bill that includes a nine of Cuomo’s ten proposals, but does not include the abortion provision. Cuomo has said that anything less than his ten point plan is unacceptable, and women’s groups have backed him up. Senator Klein turned the tables back on the women’s groups, saying that if they continue to hold on to the abortion rights provision, they will leave on the table all of the other nine important portions of the bill.

“It’s going to be the decision of these women’s groups to determine the destiny,” said Klein who says it would be “shame” if provisions  like pay equity, paid maternity leave, and  anti domestic violence and human trafficking measures were left behind because of the abortion rights dispute.

Governor Cuomo did not comment publicly, as he worked behind the scenes with legislative leaders to put the finishing touches on a plan to expand casino gambling in New York and create tax free zones at college campuses.

The lack of action on abortion rights and public campaign financing comes as a new poll finds the majority of New Yorkers back the governor’s plan to codify into state law the protections in the U S Supreme Court Roe v Wade decision.  Steve Greenberg, a spokesman for Siena College polling says 53% said they wanted all ten points including the abortion rights provision passed, compared to 32% who said just pass the other nine items.

The poll also found that New Yorkers, after a wave of scandals and arrests of lawmakers, say legislation to clean up corruption is their top priority.

Former NSA Analyst: Obama Was Wiretapped in 2004

U.S. President Barack Obama. (photo: Samrang Pring/Reuters)
U.S. President Barack Obama. (photo: Samrang Pring/Reuters)

By Alex Walsh, All Alabama
21 June 13

ormer National Security Agency analyst Russell Tice says Barack Obama - at the time a candidate for U.S. Senate - was targeted by domestic surveillance operations run by the NSA in 2004.
Tice, who is said to have contributed to a 2005 New York Times story revealing details about domestic surveillance practices, recently spoke to the "Boiling Frogs Post," an online news site run by Sibel Edmonds. Edmonds is a former FBI translator, and was herself part of a 2005 media feature about whistle blowing, this one composed by Vanity Fair.
Appearing on Edmonds' show, Tice strongly hinted at the notion that he was asked to tap several phone lines used frequently by then-candidate Obama.
"This was in summer of 2004, one of the papers that I held in my hand was to wiretap a bunch of numbers associated with a 40-something-year-old wannabe senator for Illinois," Tice said. "You wouldn't happen to know where that guy lives right now would you? It's a big white house in Washington, D.C."
Tice also spoke to The Guardian - which broke the news of Edward Snowden's decision to leak sensitive surveillance documents - earlier this month about the breadth of American domestic surveillance.
"What is going on is much larger and more systemic than anything anyone has ever suspected or imagined," he said.

US Promises Smooth Transfer of Quagmire From Afghanistan to Syria

U.S. servicemen inside a plane. (photo: Vyacheslav Oseledko/AFP/Getty Images)
U.S. servicemen inside a plane. (photo: Vyacheslav Oseledko/AFP/Getty Images)

By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker
21 June 13

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."

upporters of the United States' twelve-year quagmire in Afghanistan cheered the news today that the U.S. would strive to achieve a seamless transfer of that quagmire to Syria, effective immediately.
Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, sought to reassure those who were concerned that the U.S. withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan signalled a wavering of the nation's commitment to being mired in open-ended military muddles.
"I can tell you, right here and right now, that the U.S. is every bit as determined to engage in an ill-defined, ill-advised and seemingly interminable mission in Syria as we were in Afghanistan," Gen. Dempsey said. "All that's changing is the Zip Code."
General Dempsey said that the same tribal hatreds, sectarian violence, and untrustworthy alliances that made Afghanistan a quicksand-like morass are very much in evidence in Syria: "I am confident that we could be involved in Syria for many, many years before figuring out why we are there."
Harland Dorrinson, executive director of the National Quagmire Institute, a think tank dedicated to promoting the United States' involvement in intractable conflicts around the globe, said he found General Dempsey's words about Syria reassuring: "I felt a lot better after hearing what he had to say, and I know a lot of defense contractors felt the same way."
 

Edward Snowden Extradition Battle In Hong Kong Could Go On For Years


Reuters  Posted:

By James Pomfret

HONG KONG, June 22 (Reuters) - A former U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) contractor charged with spying by the United States and in hiding in Hong Kong is expected to be the subject of a formal extradition request at any time in what could drag into a legal battle lasting years.

Since making his revelations about massive U.S. surveillance programmes, legal sources in Hong Kong say Edward Snowden, 30, has sought legal representation from human rights lawyers as he prepares to fight U.S. attempts to force him home for trial.

U.S. authorities have charged Snowden with theft of U.S. government property, unauthorized communication of national defence information and wilful communication of classified communications intelligence to an unauthorized person, with the latter two charges coming under the U.S. Espionage Act.

The United States and Hong Kong signed an extradition treaty which came into effect in 1998, a year after Hong Kong returned from British to Chinese rule. Scores of Americans have been sent back home for trial since then.

While espionage and theft of state secrets are not cited specifically in the treaty, equivalent charges could be pressed against Snowden under Hong Kong's Official Secrets Ordinance, legal experts said.

If Hong Kong authorities did not charge Snowden with an equivalent crime, authorities could not extradite him, lawyers said. In the absence of charges, Snowden was also theoretically free to leave the city, one legal expert said.

Simon Young, a law professor at the University of Hong Kong, said that while the first charge involving theft might readily find equivalence in Hong Kong, the latter two spying offences will likely attract "litigation and dispute" in the courts.

The timeframe for such proceedings remains unclear, but Hectar Pun, a barrister with human rights expertise, was quoted as saying such an extradition could take three to five years.

Under Hong Kong's extradition mechanism, a request first goes through diplomatic channels to Hong Kong's leader, who decides whether to issue an "authority to proceed". If granted, a magistrate issues a formal warrant for the arrest of Snowden.

Once brought before the court, the judge would decide whether there was sufficient evidence to commit Snowden to trial or dismiss the case, though any decision could be appealed in a higher court.

Snowden could claim political asylum in Hong Kong, arguing he would face torture back home. Article six of the treaty states extradition should be refused for "an offence of a political character".

"The unfairness of his trial at home and his likely treatment in custody" were important factors to consider for Snowden, said Young, the law professor, on Snowden's chances of claiming political immunity from extradition.

Should a Hong Kong court eventually call for Snowden's extradition, Hong Kong's leader and China could, however, still veto the decision on national security or defence grounds.

Snowden has admitted leaking secrets about classified U.S. surveillance programmes, which he said he did in the public interest. Supporters say he is a whistleblower, while critics call him a criminal and perhaps even a traitor. (Editing by Nick Macfie)

Friday, June 21, 2013

More shake ups by Borough President Ruben Diaz at troubled Community Board 9

Bronx 

Beep allegedly wants District Manager Francisco Gonzalez fired. He lacked the votes last year, so he sacked six Gonzalez loyalists.

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In happier times. Here’s Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. (left) with Community Board 9 District Manager Francisco Gonzalez. Gonzalez is apparently on the outs with the Beep, who is allegedly packing the board until he has enough people to get Gonzalez fired.

Alvarez, Enid/New York Daily News/Alvarez, Enid/New York Daily News

In happier times. Here’s Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. (left) with Community Board 9 District Manager Francisco Gonzalez. Gonzalez is apparently on the outs with the Beep, who is allegedly packing the board until he has enough people to get Gonzalez fired.

BY DENIS SLATTERY
The borough president has again shaken up one of the most troubled Bronx community boards, angering both residents and board members.
Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. declined to reappoint six apparently disloyal members from Community Board 9 in Soundview — and another seven, allegedly fed up with the turmoil, did not apply for reappointment.
The move comes a less than a year after Diaz fired and replaced almost half of the board.
“He is obviously loading up the board with people that he believes will best represent him,” said City Council candidate Walter Nestler.
Others say Diaz is trying to stack the board with members who will vote to ouster longtime District Manager Francisco Gonzalez.
In December, the board put forth a motion to remove Gonzalez but failed to get enough votes for the ouster.
Next time, Gonzalez will likely be sacked from his job as district manager, a paid employee who runs the board's office and day to day operations.
And Diaz opponents call his moves Machiavellian.
“The Borough President has to understand one thing: the community boards are there to represent the people, not the politicians,” said Nestler.
In the latest bloodletting, Diaz let go of Ahia Muhammed, Lydia Bauza, Mohammed Chowdhury, Mary Goytia, Hector Osorio and vice-chair Steven Rivera — all of who either abstained from voting or voted to keep Gonzalez.
On top of the rotating number of members, Gonzalez, who has been at the helm of the board office for 20 years, is currently under investigation by the city for possibly violating conflict of interest laws.
Since the December vote, meetings have been riddled with infighting and outbursts from the public.
Diaz spokesman, John DeSio, said the Borough President's decisions are based solely on what he thinks is best for the community.
“We have a long internal process,” DeSio said in a statement. “In the end, we make the selections based on how we believe people will represent both our office and their respective communities.”
Community Board 9 also covers Castle Hill, Unionport and Parkchester.
Board member Sheik Moussa Drammeh said Diaz had no one but himself to blame for the turmoil.
“The machine tries to appoint people that will be yes-men — and we wind up with nothing,” Drammeh said.
“If we actually had people on the board that wanted to advocate for the community we might be able to get something accomplished instead of fighting.”
Gonzalez has been out of the office for several weeks after having surgery to install a pacemaker.
Bharati Kemraj, who was appointed to the board last August, believes the moves made by the borough president are a positive step for the community.
“I feel that a lot of the newer members have a lot to offer the community,” Kemraj said. “The area is changing rapidly and I think the changes on the board reflect that.”
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Trailside

Albanese Takes Mayoral Bid Underground

Sal Albanese, a Democrat, recently worked New York City’s rails to try to woo some of the many voters who have no idea who he is.
A Lifeline for Minorities, Catholic Schools Retrench
Fernando Ferrer, the former Bronx borough president, graduated from Cardinal Spellman High School in the Bronx.
Kirsten Luce for The New York Times
Fernando Ferrer, the former Bronx borough president, graduated from Cardinal Spellman High School in the Bronx.
Many blacks and Latinos say they can trace the success they have achieved in their careers to the guidance they received in Catholic schools.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Spike Lee Shows Support for Leaving Madison Square Garden at current location at its W. 33rd street


Video by Rafael Martínez Alequin

NYPD fights to fight crime with new ad, as Council tries to ban using ‘race, gender, or age’ to ID suspects

By KIRSTAN CONLEY 

Last Updated: 12:03 PM, June 19, 2013 

Posted: 2:33 AM, June 19, 2013

Cops might as well wear blindfolds if the City Council passes a bill that would let them use little more than the color of a suspect’s clothing in descriptions — or risk being sued for profiling, according to this provocative new ad (pictured) from the NYPD captains union.
The ad asks, “How effective is a police officer with a blindfold on?”

Doug Kuntz
And the answer is not very, says the NYPD Captains Endowment Association, which is fighting the measure, claiming it would handcuff cops and send crime rates soaring.
Union President Roy Richter — who is seen in the ad wearing a blindfold in Times Square — told The Post the bill is dangerous because “it will ban cops from identifying a suspect’s age, gender, color or disability.
“When we have wanted suspects and patterns of crimes, those are very important descriptive terms to let officers know who to look for.”
The ad warns that if cops transmit a description of a suspect that goes beyond the color of his or her clothing, they could be sued for racial profiling if the proposal becomes law.
The ad will appear in tomorrow’s Post, in addition to the union’s Web site, Twitter and Facebook — and provides links to contacts for City Council members to sway their vote on the measure.
The bill’s sponsor, Jumaane Williams (D-Brooklyn), and Speaker Christine Quinn are going to bypass normal committee process and bring the measure directly to a vote.
Detectives-union President Michael Palladino blasted Quinn for supporting the rare expedited process — and said his union plans to place ads in newspapers next week.
“The [union’s] ad will focus on . . . Speaker Quinn’s political decision to sell the security of all New Yorkers for votes. Where was the speaker and her legislation for the last seven years?” Palladino asked.
A rep for Quinn said she sent the proposals to a floor vote because a majority of council members supported it and Public Safety Committee chair Peter Vallone Jr. — an opponent — refused to let it out of committee.
PBA President Pat Lynch said the “so-called biased policing” package was a misnomer.
“Rather than focus on unnecessary laws, the council should be supporting its police officers — not attacking them,” he said.
“Racial profiling is already illegal — and should be.”
Williams and fellow Brooklyn Democrat Brad Lander, a co-sponsor of the proposal, say it would only expand the city’s existing racial-profiling law by adding other demographic groups that should be protected, such as the homeless and gay people.
They have said police are free, under the bill, to chase leads that include descriptions but cannot stop and frisk people based solely on those descriptions.
But the Bloomberg administration has warned that the bill could lead to an avalanche of lawsuits against the city by any members of a protected class who believe that they were profiled.
Additional reporting by Bob Fredericks
kconley@nypost.com

Quinn’s Memoir Goes Largely Unsold, When It Can Be Found

Christine C. Quinn’s book, which was released on June 11, has sold only 100 copies.
Crime
Son of ex-state Sen. Pedro Espada Jr. gets 6 months in prison for corruption scheme

Pedro G. Espada, 39, will also get six months of house arrest after his release from prison for cheating on his taxes and stealing from a Bronx nonprofit.

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NYC PAPERS OUT. Social media use restricted to low res file max 184 x 128 pixels and 72 dpi

Jesse Ward/Jesse Ward for New York Daily News

Pedro G. Espada was found guilty of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Soundview Healthcare Network founded by disgraced former state Sen. Pedro Espada Jr.

The repentant son of disgraced ex-state Sen. Pedro Espada Jr. was sentenced Tuesday to six months in prison for cheating on his taxes and stealing from a Bronx nonprofit.
Pedro G. Espada, 39, also will serve six months of house arrest after his release.
RELATED: PEDRO ESPADA JR. SENTENCED TO 5 YEARS FOR EMBEZZLEMENT
Former state Sen. Pedro Espada Jr. was defiant right up to the end regarind hundreds of thousands of dollars stolen from a healthcare nonprofit he helped create. He will spend five years in prison after being convicted of corruption and tax evasion.

KIRSTEN LUCE/NYT

Former state Sen. Pedro Espada Jr. was defiant right up to the end regarind hundreds of thousands of dollars stolen from a healthcare nonprofit he helped create. He will spend five years in prison after being convicted of corruption and tax evasion.

Brooklyn Federal Judge Frederic Block grappled with the dysfunctional dynamic of Espada, depicted by his lawyer as a son lacking the backbone to stand up to his charismatic father.
“He (Espada) helped himself to a lot of monies; he didn't have to do it,” Block said. “That sticks in my craw.”
RELATED: SON OF EX-STATE SEN. SAYS HIS DAD IS TO BLAME
Former state Sen. Pedro Espada Jr. allegedly splurged on Broadway tickets and lobster dinners using money he pilfered from a Bronx nonprofit Soundview Healthcare Network.

Bebeto Matthews/AP

Former state Sen. Pedro Espada Jr. allegedly splurged on Broadway tickets and lobster dinners using money he pilfered from a Bronx nonprofit Soundview Healthcare Network.

The hefty Espada stood before the judge in stark contrast to his remorseless seafood-loving father who got five years behind bars last week. The father and son siphoned hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Soundview Healthcare Network the elder Espada founded in 1981.
With his younger brother Alejandro and wife, Lourdes, looking on Tuesday, Espada’s voice broke as he addressed the judge. “Not a day goes by without immense regret for the way things were done at Soundview,” he said.
RELATED: DISGRACED EX-SEN. PEDRO ESPADA, JR. DEMANDING COURTHOUSE SURVEILLANCE TO PROVE JUDGE PRESSURED JURY
The former city councilman and state assemblyman also must pay the IRS $15,628.

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/son-disgraced-espada-6-months-prison-article-1.1376348#ixzz2Wfau6VN2

Mr. Espada said that he had been ready for his legal ordeal to end long before his father was. “Over the course of the last year, obviously we have been at odds, as he wanted to fight this more and I wanted to take responsibility and move forward with my life,” he said.

Younger Espada, Like His Father, Is Sentenced for Theft From Bronx Center

A judge said that while Pedro Gautier Espada was “somewhat under his father’s thumb,” that did not excuse his stealing federal money from a Bronx health center.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Americans Sent Over a Hundred Million Father’s Day Messages, Says N.S.A.

The Borowitz Report

June 17, 2013

Americans Sent Over a Hundred Million Father’s Day Messages, Says N.S.A.



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WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Americans sent over a hundred million Father’s Day messages on Sunday, the National Security Agency reported today.
The hundred-million number, while robust, falls short of the hundred and twenty million Mother’s Day messages collected by the N.S.A. in May.
The difference between the two figures is “not surprising,” said N.S.A. director General Keith B. Alexander. He added, “On the whole, mothers take Mother’s Day more seriously—if the e-mails we read by mothers whose children forgot are any indication.”
General Alexander said that the agency collected in the neighborhood of two to three million such e-mails from angry mothers this year.
The N.S.A. director added that the agency had not foiled any terror plots over the weekend but did uncover between thirty and forty thousand extramarital relationships.
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Above: General Keith Alexander. Photograph by Mark Wilson/Getty.

Monday, June 17, 2013

Quinn, Shifting Approach, Will Fight Attacks in Speech

In an address on Monday, the City Council speaker will highlight her legislative accomplishments and claim that her Democratic mayoral rivals are more talk than action.

Sunday, June 16, 2013

"Breslin on Breslin"

Published on Jun 7, 2013

"Breslin on Breslin" is an episode from a new series called, Irish Writers in America, debuting this fall on CUNY TV. The series features interviews with twenty-four of the best Irish and Irish-American writers working today. In this episode, legendary journalist and author of The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight, Jimmy Breslin, goes under the microscope of his own muckraking interview style. Subjects range from how he changed the face of journalism, being a target of the Son of Sam, what it means to "find the gravedigger" in the story, the past tragedies and joys of his personal life, to the importance of drinking, the allure of criminals, his preference for the challenges of fiction, the demise of journalism as we know it, and how the subject of his latest book, Branch Rickey, changed the country for good.

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Crooked ex-state Sen. Pedro Espada Jr. sentenced to 5 years in prison for embezzlement


The shellfish snob's story is now one of rags to riches to prison — and disgrace. He was sentenced to federal prison for plundering a nonprofit and used funds to renovate his home, get spa treatments for his wife and have his lobster delivered and shucked.

Comments (54)

Updated: Saturday, June 15, 2013, 12:14 AM


























Joe Marino/New York Daily News

Pedro Espada Jr. shows his defiance arrives June 14th 2013 for sentencing on corruption charges.

Holy mackerel!
Pedro Espada Jr. will have to settle for prison tuna and mackerel instead of the lobster and sushi he’d been gorging himself on with plundered money from his nonprofit.
His rags-to-stolen-riches story of a homeless teen who goes from riding the subways to serving as one of the state’s most powerful politicians came to a crashing end Friday with a judge sentencing him to five years in federal prison.
On top of $344 worth in roses to his wife and $14,000 on Broadway tickets, Pedro Espada spent $100 for a lobster delivery PLUS an additional $18 to have the shell removed.

New York Daily News

On top of $344 worth in roses to his wife and $14,000 on Broadway tickets, Pedro Espada spent $100 for a lobster delivery PLUS an additional $18 to have the shell removed.

Brooklyn Judge Frederic Block also ordered the former seafood-loving Democratic state senator to pay $368,000 in forfeiture, $368,000 in restitution and $118,500 to the IRS. He also has to serve 100 hours of community service.
RELATED: FEDS ASK FOR 7 YEARS IN SLAMMER FOR DISGRACED EX-SEN. PEDRO ESPADA
The judge credited Espada’s good deeds in the past, but embraced the government’s characterization that he is “arrogant” and used his nonprofit as a “piggy bank.”
Pedro Espadad said his work with Soundview Health Network was a 'centerpiece' of his legislative careers. Turns out he was guilty of embezzling money from the organization to feed his shellfish appetite, among other things.

Mariela Lombard/for New York Daily News

Pedro Espadad said his work with Soundview Health Network was a 'centerpiece' of his legislative careers. Turns out he was guilty of embezzling money from the organization to feed his shellfish appetite, among other things.

Block ordered U.S. Marshals to take Espada into custody immediately, refusing to grant him the courtesy of self-surrendering at a later date.
Grim-faced, Espada touched his lips with two fingers and blew a kiss to his wife, Connie, before he was led away through a side door.
“This case showed who Pedro Espada really is,” said Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch. “A thief in a suit.”
Former state senator Pedro Espada Jr. arrives  June 14, 2013, at Federal Court. He was convicted last year of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Soundview Healthcare network he founded in 1981.

Aaron Showalter/New York Daily News

Former state senator Pedro Espada Jr. arrives June 14, 2013, at Federal Court. He was convicted last year of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Soundview Healthcare network he founded in 1981.

RELATED: SON OF EX-STATE SEN. SAYS HIS DAD IS TO BLAME
Espada, 59, was convicted last year of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Soundview Healthcare network he founded in 1981 to serve the poor in the Bronx. He and his son Pedro Gautier later pleaded guilty to tax evasion.
Armed with a corporate American Express credit card, Espada siphoned funds meant for the needy for personal gain, spending thousands of dollars on dinners, spa gift certificates for his wife, renovations for his Westchester home and parties. Meanwhile, the center lacked X-ray and MRI machines and other medical supplies
Judge Frederic Block  ordered Espada to prison for five years and to pay $368,088 in forfeiture, $368,087.43 in restitution and $118,531 to the IRS. He also has to serve 100 hours of community service.

Aaron Showalter/New York Daily News

Judge Frederic Block ordered Espada to prison for five years and to pay $368,088 in forfeiture, $368,087.43 in restitution and $118,531 to the IRS. He also has to serve 100 hours of community service.

“Espada spent over $100 on a lobster dinner delivered to his home in Mamaroneck that included an $18 charge to have the shell removed because apparently Espada did not want to endure that burden himself,” Assistant U.S. Attorneys Todd Kaminsky and Carolyn Pokorny wrote in court papers.
Before the judge handed down his sentence, a defiant Espada told him that the Soundview clinic was the “centerpiece” of his life work.
RELATED: DISGRACED EX-SEN. PEDRO ESPADA, JR. DEMANDING COURTHOUSE SURVEILLANCE TO PROVE JUDGE PRESSURED JURY
Espada siphoned money from Soundview to renovate his home.

Espada siphoned money from Soundview to renovate his home.

“What I created as a young man was not a ‘piggy bank’ but a lifeline that served thousands of people for 30 years,” said the disgraced pol, who was nattily dressed in a navy suit and yellow tie.
He refused to say whether he accepted responsibility for the embezzlement conviction because of his appeal.
Block agreed that Espada deserved credit for the medical services his clinic provided to the poor for decades.
Espada claimed the judge presiding over his case, Judge Frederic Block, was deliberating with juror Luis Roman, who bolted from court after sentencing.

Joe Marino/New York Daily News

Espada claimed the judge presiding over his case, Judge Frederic Block, was deliberating with juror Luis Roman, who bolted from court after sentencing.

He also noted that many of the gifts Espada purchased with stolen money went to his wife, not a mistress, and mused about how extraordinary it seemed that he didn’t have a girlfriend in Albany.
RELATED: PEDRO ESPADA JR. LIVING ON LESS THAN $3,000 A MONTH
“It doesn’t matter if a misappropriated dollar goes to a wife or a girlfriend,” Kaminsky shot back.
Judge Frederic Block says Espada's claims he spoke with juror during deliberations were unfounded since he was not even in the courthouse at the time.

Aaron Showalter/New York Daily News

Judge Frederic Block says Espada's claims he spoke with juror during deliberations were unfounded since he was not even in the courthouse at the time.

Espada had been waging an 11th-hour effort to set aside the verdict and withdraw his guilty plea by accusing the judge of committing misconduct by secretly speaking to the jurors while they were deliberating. Block said he was not even in the courthouse when a juror claimed he entered the jury room.
Espada then demanded a review of courthouse records to back up his claims.
The strategy backfired — court officials produced computer records of Block’s access swipe card in court on Friday showing beyond any doubt that he was not in the building when the juror claimed.
Espada blew kiss to wife Connie, seen here with son Alejandro on Friday.

Aaron Showalter/New York Daily News

Espada blew kiss to wife Connie, seen here with son Alejandro on Friday.

RELATED: EX-SEN. PEDRO ESPADA SAYS NEW EVIDENCE PROVES INNOCENCE
“I’m glad there’s no access card in the men’s room,” Block quipped after noting how extensively his comings and goings in the courthouse are electronically tracked.
Block said he was referring juror Luis Roman’s “false” affidavit to the U.S. attorney’s office for possible prosecutions of the juror and Espada for obstruction of justice.
Roman attended the sentencing, he told the Daily News, at Connie Espada’s invitation. He appeared shaken that he was now the subject of a criminal investigation.
“I could have been mistaken about the timing, it’s been a year,” Roman said in a turnabout. “Nobody told me to lie.”
RELATED: JUDGE DISPUTES ESPADA'S CLAIM HE PRIVATELY URGED A VERDICT
Espada is a member of a rogues gallery of state senators recently convicted or indicted on corruption charges that includes Carl Kruger (D-Brooklyn), Shirley Huntley (D-Queens), Malcolm Smith (D-Queens), Hiram Monserrate (D-Queens) and Joseph Bruno (R-Rensselaer).
For the next month, Espada will call home the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn where he will likely be in solitary confinement due to his notoriety. The U.S. Bureau of Prisons will likely send him to a minimum security camp, like Fort Dix, N.J., to serve his sentence with other white-collar and nonviolent felons.
“There’s no merit to his appeal in my opinion,” Block said. “I sat through the trial, the evidence against him was overwhelming.”
Prosecutors had argued that Espada deserved a sentence of seven years while defense lawyer Angel Cruz sought no jail time at all.
Gov. Cuomo, who launched the probe as then-state attorney general into Espada’s thievery, said justice was served by the sentence.
jmarzulli@nydailynews.com

Former state Sen. Pedro Espada Jr. slapped with 5-year prison sentence


  • Last Updated: 6:51 AM, June 15, 2013 
  • Posted: 12:58 AM, June 15, 2013
There’s no lobster where he’s going.
Disgraced ex-state Sen. Pedro Espada Jr. — who looted his taxpayer-funded Bronx nonprofit to pay for lavish meals and a fancy car — was slapped with five years in prison yesterday after refusing to apologize for his crimes.
“There’s no question that Mr. Espada’s sense of entitlement and arrogance grew over the years and he treated Soundview [Healthcare Network] as his personal piggy bank,” fumed Brooklyn federal Judge Frederic Block.
In addition to the jail term, the former state Senate majority leader must cough up more than $736,000 in fines and $118,531 in taxes — although Block doubted whether the scammer would ever pay up.
HE’S A BORN LOOTER: Pedro Espada Jr., with son Alejandro in a Puerto Rican flag jacket, looks spiffy yesterday before being hauled off to jail for robbing his nonprofit blind.
Paul Martinka
 
HE’S A BORN LOOTER: Pedro Espada Jr., with son Alejandro in a Puerto Rican flag jacket, looks spiffy yesterday before being hauled off to jail for robbing his nonprofit blind.
“I don’t think he has a lot of money,” Block said.
Espada, dressed in a natty blue suit and cuff links, seemed anxious to have his wife witness his final disgrace, asking family members in the gallery before his sentencing hearing started, “Where’s Connie? Where’s Connie?”
Told she was on her way, he said, “Save her a seat.”
At one point, Block did give Espada credit for at least one thing: pampering his wife.
“So many of these gifts went to his wife, Connie. I didn’t see any indication that he had a mistress. He may be the only politician in Albany who doesn’t have a mistress,” Block quipped.
Espada blew a kiss to his wife as he was hauled out of court.
One of their sons, Alejandro, also was on hand — dressed in a Puerto Rican flag jacket.
Espada was convicted last year of four separate counts of theft related to his rampant looting of the Bronx-based health-care clinics he founded more than 30 years ago.
He had faced as little as one year behind bars; prosecutors were seeking seven.
Both Espada, 59, and son Pedro Gautier Espada, 39, had been charged with stealing more than $545,000 from Soundview by having the federally supported non-profit pick up the tab for their personal expenses.
Gautier Espada likely will get 18 months in prison when he is sentenced June 18.
The Espadas falsely claimed their spending was related to legitimate business purposes for Soundview, which was supposed to help poor Bronx residents get quality health care.
Some of the most egregious examples of Espada’s spending included the food he bought for himself and his family.
“Espada spent over $100 on a lobster dinner delivered to his home in Mamaroneck that included an $18 charge to have the shell removed because apparently Espada did not want to endure that burden himself,” prosecutors wrote in one court filing.
He also spent thousands of Soundview dollars for a relative’s birthday party that included a pony and for a family vacation in Puerto Rico.
Espada once even charged a 95-cent cookie from Starbucks on Soundview’s card.
But even when pressed by Block, the greedy politician still wouldn’t admit wrongdoing.
“Do you accept responsibility for this?” Block asked.
Espada said he had already pleaded guilty on the tax charge and added, “I am at this point not addressing that issue.”
The crafty pilferer instead praised the work of Soundview.
“The centerpiece of it all was always the patients,” he said. “The patients always came back to Soundview.”
Espada pleaded for a lesser sentence, to no avail.
“I have been a lot of things. Right now, I’m a grandfather of 11 grandchildren,” he said. “I don’t want these grandchildren to be without their grandfather.”
Espada had tried a variety of tricks to dodge prison, including filing an affidavit this week from a juror who claimed Block once walked into the deliberations room and spoke to jurors.
Block yesterday ticked off multiple reasons as to why he couldn’t have been in the courthouse when the juror said he was, including phone records that showed he was at home that morning. He blasted Espada for filing what he said he must have known was an incorrect affidavit.
The juror, Luis Roman, who said Espada’s wife contacted him and told him to come to yesterday’s hearing, later insisted outside court: “Nobody told me to lie . . . I could be mistaken about the time.”
jsaul@nypost.com

Murdoch Divorce Stuns Satan

June 13, 2013
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HELL (The Borowitz Report)—Word that the News Corporation chief executive Rupert Murdoch has filed for divorce from his wife, Wendi Deng, came as a “total surprise” to longtime Murdoch confidant Satan, the Lord of the Underworld said today.
“I am totally blindsided by this,” Satan told reporters. “He and I talk every day.”
Citing his long history with the media titan, the Hound of Hell said, “We go way back. I gave him the idea for Fox News. I told him to hire Roger Ailes. That’s why this is such a shock.”
A frequent dining companion of the Murdochs, Satan said he “didn’t have a clue that they were having problems.”
“I’ve had dozens of dinners with them in the Hamptons,” he said. “Did they bicker? No more than other couples. But they seemed to be on the same page about all the important things, like creating corrupt media monopolies and buying politicians. I thought they were for keeps.”
Adding that he “cares deeply about his friends,” Satan said the news about the Murdochs had hit him especially hard: “I was just starting to get over the Putins.”
The Prince of Darkness said he first got word of the Murdoch divorce about an hour before the official announcement: “My banker at Goldman Sachs called and told me to sell my News Corp. stock right away.”
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Photograph by Matt Sayles/AP.