Ahad, 9 Februari 2014

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Jones makes history for Britain - Washington Post

Posted: 09 Feb 2014 08:05 AM PST

February 9, 2014, 11:02 AM

KRASNAYA POLYANA, Russia — Jenny Jones' first snowboarding lesson didn't include, among other things, snow.

Instead, the then-teenager spent 30 minutes gingerly making her way over the synthetic material that substitutes for the white stuff on one of the hills near her hometown of Bristol, a couple hours west of London.

There were no snowboarders, not great ones anyway, in Great Britain in the late 1990s.

There are now, including one with an unlikely and hard-won Olympic medal hanging around her neck. The 33-year-old Jones made history on Sunday in the women's slopestyle final, grabbing bronze with a precise run through challenging Rosa Khutor Extreme Park to become the first British athlete to win a medal in a snow-based Olympic event.

"It feels incredible, absolutely incredible," Jones said. "I'm just in a moment right now."

One that ended decades of futility for a nation that isn't exactly known for its prowess on powder and whose highest peaks are oversized hills.

Skier Alain Baxter briefly gave the country its first medal on snow when he came in third in the slalom in Salt Lake City in 2002. Baxter's medal was later stripped for a failed drug test.

Historically, British Olympians who strap boots on have been also-rans or oddities. Eddie "The Eagle" Edwards became a cult hero in Calgary in 1988 when he finished last in two ski jumping events, his large glasses and not exactly textbook form endearing him to some while also paving the way for the International Olympic Committee to institute new qualifying guidelines to keep the likes of Edwards out of harm's way.

Those days, however, are long gone. Jones is at the crest of a wave of British snowboarders who have been making inroads on a discipline traditionally dominated by Americans.

Barely 24 hours before her history-making run, teammates Jamie Nicholls and Billy Morgan finished in the top 10 in the men's slopestyle finals. Where once the only option for high-level training was a plane ticket to exotic places, there are snow domes popping up all over the United Kingdom.

"We've got some great talent coming through and it feels nice to see that strong force from the British side of things," she said.

A force which she has led for most of the last 15 years. After getting the bug and working as a housekeeper at a ski resort to give her more time to shred, Jones won her first national snowboarding title in 1999.

A decade later she won slopestyle gold at the X Games. The podiums have slowed recently, and a concussion sustained in training two months ago forced her to "have a timeout for a few weeks."

Though she arrived in Sochi relatively healthy, she failed to navigate qualifying, forcing her into a semifinal where she posted the third-highest score to squeak into the finals.

Getting to the medal round seemed to take some of the pressure off.

"Once I was in the finals, it was, just, do the cleanest possible run that you can do," Jones said.

While she lacks the big air tricks of gold medalist Jamie Anderson, Jones is technically skilled, peppering her run with meticulous grabs that look fairly easy to the naked eye but are decidedly complex when hurtling down a hill at 30 mph.

Jones celebrated after landing the final jump of her second then was forced to wait several anxious moments while the judges tried to figure out what to make of it. When her score of 87.00 was posted — ultimately just a quarter-point better than fourth place — she waved to the pockets of Brits scattered about the stands.

"When I first started there wasn't a lot of us," she said. "I would travel a lot with girls from other nationalities, other parts of Europe. There's been an increase of British riders."

A number that only figures to grow after the country's breakthrough weekend.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Justice Department to give married same-sex couples equal protection - Washington Post

Posted: 09 Feb 2014 08:20 AM PST

In a new policy memo, the department will spell out the rights of same-sex couples, including the right to decline to give testimony that might incriminate their spouses, even if their marriages are not recognized in the state where the couple lives.

Under the Justice Department policy, federal inmates in same-sex marriages will also be entitled to the same rights and privileges as inmates in heterosexual marriages, including visitation by a spouse, escorted trips to attend a spouse's funeral, correspondence with a spouse, and compassionate release or reduction in sentence based on the incapacitation of an inmate's spouse.

In addition, an inmate in a same-sex marriage can be furloughed to be present during a crisis involving a spouse. In bankruptcy cases, same-sex married couples will be eligible to file for bankruptcy jointly. Domestic support obligations will include debts, such as alimony, owed to a former same-sex spouse. Certain debts to same-sex spouses or former spouses should be excepted from discharge.

"This means that, in every courthouse, in every proceeding and in every place where a member of the Department of Justice stands on behalf of the United States — they will strive to ensure that same-sex marriages receive the same privileges, protections, and rights as opposite-sex marriages under federal law," Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. said in a speech Saturday night at the Human Rights Campaign's Greater New York Gala at the Waldorf Astoria in New York, where he announced the new policy.

"This landmark announcement will change the lives of countless committed gay and lesbian couples for the better," Human Rights Campaign President Chad Griffin said in a statement. "While the immediate effect of these policy decisions is that all married gay couples will be treated equally under the law, the long-term effects are more profound. Today, our nation moves closer toward its ideals of equality and fairness for all."

The Justice Department's new policy comes three years after it said it would not defend cases in court involving the Defense of Marriage Act anymore. Last year, the Supreme Court ruled that a key part of DOMA was unconstitutional.

The ruling "marked a major victory for the cause of equal protection under U.S. law, and a significant step forward for committed and loving couples throughout the country," Holder said Tuesday in Sweden during an address to the Swedish parliament.

In January, Holder intervened in the legal battle over same-sex marriage in Utah and announced that the more than 1,300 same-sex marriages that took place there in December and January are considered legal under federal law, even though a step by the Supreme Court cast doubt on the marriages and state officials would not recognize those unions.

On Saturday, the National Organization for Marriage released a statement decrying the policy move.

"This is just the latest in a series of moves by the Obama administration, and in particular the Department of Justice, to undermine the authority and sovereignty of the states to make their own determinations regulating the institution of marriage," Brian Brown, the group's president, said in the statement. "The American public needs to realize how egregious and how dangerous these usurpations are and how far-reaching the implications can be. The changes being proposed here . . . serve as a potent reminder of why it is simply a lie to say that redefining marriage doesn't affect everyone in society."

The Justice Department has already approved policy changes by other federal agencies to extend federal benefits to same-sex married couples.

Last summer, the Office of Personnel Management announced that federal employees in same-sex marriages could apply for health, dental, life, long-term care and retirement benefits. The Department of Health and Human Services said that legally married same-sex seniors on Medicare would be eligible for equal benefits and joint placement in nursing homes.

The Social Security Administration will pay death benefits to survivors of a same-sex marriage. The Department of Homeland Security will treat same-sex spouses equally for the purposes of obtaining a green card if the spouse is a foreign national. And the IRS has begun treating same-sex marriages equally for tax-filing purposes.

"We are, right now, in the middle of marking a number of 50-year anniversaries of key milestones in the civil rights movement," Holder said Saturday night. "And yet, as all-
important as the fight against racial discrimination was then, and remains today, know this: My commitment to confronting discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity runs just as deep."

Holder made a similar statement in favor of expanding LGBT rights in Sweden on Tuesday.

The new policy will have "important, real-world implications for same-sex married couples that interact with the criminal justice system," Holder said.

The Justice Department will also recognize same-sex couples in a number of key benefits programs it administers, such as the Radiation Exposure Compensation Program, the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund and the Public Safety Officers' Benefits Program, which provides death benefits and educational benefits to surviving spouses of public safety officers.

"This program is one way that we, as a country, stand by the families of those who put themselves in harm's way to keep our communities safe, and we must never do that selectively," Holder said. "When any law enforcement officer falls in the line of duty or is gravely injured, the federal government should stand by that hero's spouse — no matter whether that spouse is straight or gay."

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Sabtu, 8 Februari 2014

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Sage Kotsenburg wins first Olympic gold in men's slopestyle competiton - Washington Post

Posted: 08 Feb 2014 08:30 AM PST

KRASNAYA POLYANA, Russia — With his long blonde hair sprouting out of a tan knit cap, Sage Kotsenburg took a deep breath, not fully prepared for what was coming next. Out of the best snowboarders in the world, they were about to announce the most unlikely of gold medal recipients.

Kotsenburg, his laid-back lingo native to the slopes, later said he was "stoked" after such a "sick" men's slopestyle competition. But even after his name was announced, the affable 20-year old from Park City, Utah, stood shocked on the Olympic podium, wearing a frozen, immovable smile. He'd won the first gold medal of these Olympics and the first ever rewarded in the slopestyle event.

"I'm pretty surprised I won, honestly," he said.

How unlikely was Kotsenburg's gold medal win? Well, consider this: He won a Grand Prix event three weeks ago in Mammoth Lakes, Calif. Before that, he was stuck in a "mega drought" and by his own recollection hadn't won a snowboard competition since he was 11.

"Coming here and winning, I can't even describe the feeling," he said. "It's so cool."

The slopestyle event — a steep snowboard course featuring long rails and big jumps — debuted at these Sochi Olympics and made headlines earlier in the week when American Shaun White, the most famous athlete the sport has known, dropped out of the competition. By comparison, Kotsenburg was among the least-known participants.

"I woke up today not even really thinking about the finals," he said, "thinking about semifinals first."

A total of 20 riders hit the mountain Saturday morning, competing for one of four remaining spots in the afternoon finals. Kotsenburg posted the second-highest mark and was the only American to advance. "Whoa how random is this I made finals at the Olympics!!!" he tweeted to his supporters.

He figured he had nothing to lose in the finals. He called his brother and said he was considering the unthinkable: throwing a trick on the biggest stage imaginable that he'd never before attempted. It's called a 1620 Japan — imagine 4½ rotations with a behind-the-back board grab — and he nailed it, capping off a stylish run where an array of board grabs impressed more than any big eye-popping jumps.

"I had no idea I was even going to do a 1620 in my run until, like, three minutes before I dropped," he said. "That's kind of what I'm all about, just kind of being random."

Kotsenburg had no clue how the judges would receive it. Since Thursday's qualification round, snowboarders had been scratching their heads, trying to decipher the Olympic scoring. Kotsenburg was among the most vocal riders earlier in the week, saying judges were encouraging "robotic" jumps and not rewarding creativity.

"A lot of people in snowboarding spoke out about what they thought about the judging. Maybe they saw it," he said. "When you have a whole community of snowboarders thinking the judging is off, you got to take something into consideration, like, 'Hey, maybe we should be rewarding this more.'"

Evolving sports of the Winter Olympics

Impressed by Saturday's run in the finals, the judges gave Kotsenburg a score of 93.5 — "Pretty sick to see that some weird, creative stuff got rewarded," he'd say later — and then the American rider had to hold his breath as he watched the rest of the field try to top his mark. One by one they came down, flipping, spinning and in some cases, falling. With such a high score to beat, many had to go big and it cost them.

Even those who stayed on their feet didn't always get the scores they wanted. Mark McMorris impressively landed two triple corks — Kotsenburg didn't even attempt one — but the Canadian rider finished the competition in third place with a score of 88.75.

"We're not really knowing what's going on with the judges," said Canadian rider Maxence Parrot, the fifth-place finisher. "We don't know how they score us, we don't know what they're looking for on the slope. That, I think, is the thing we should get in other contests: to know what judges want to see in the jumps."

McMorris, a gold-medal favorite who was competing with a broken rib, didn't hide his disappointment with the scoring in the early rounds, but he refrained from being too critical after his bronze-winning run Saturday.

"Just to ride the way I want to ride is the most important thing," McMorris said. "The rest is up to the judges, and I'm happy with everything, the outcome. A lot of people think it should have been different, but I'm going to still smile and represent Canada the best I can."

Kotsenburg's score held up. Norway's Staale Sandbech took silver with a 91.75, and the judges seemed to make a statement Saturday. Style and creativity mean something, and few Olympic riders showed more personality on and off the board than Kotsenburg.

He was mugging for cameras and waving to the crowd. On the podium, when he heard his name called, he hugged his competitors and invited them to join him on the top step.

On the biggest stage, Kotsenburg went for broke, not letting expectations, his own modest history or anything else dictate his run.

"That's what snowboarding is all about. It's based off doing what you want to do," Kotsenburg said. "There's no blueprint to snowboarding. You can really make your own mark and put your own flair on tricks."

Younger women outspoken about Woody Allen and Dylan Farrow - Los Angeles Times

Posted: 08 Feb 2014 07:53 AM PST

Sarah Seltzer grew up a fan of Woody Allen movies — her parents showed her "Sleeper," "Annie Hall," and "Everyone Says I Love You" once she was old enough to get the jokes. As a 31-year-old writer living in New York, she has admired Allen's more recent work, the bittersweet "Midnight in Paris," the meaty roles for women in "Blue Jasmine."

So when the New York Times website published an open letter from Allen's adopted daughter Dylan Farrow last week, alleging that the director sexually assaulted her at age 7, Seltzer was thrown. The first time Allen's relationship with Dylan made news, during his ugly custody battle with her adoptive mother, Mia Farrow, in the early 1990s, Seltzer was too young to understand the story. Now she was chilled by it.

"I found the letter deeply convincing and very sad," Seltzer said. "I felt very sorry for Dylan and for all the pain that she testified to in the letter. I sort of remember hearing stories about this when I was in elementary school, but it was a little over my head."

PHOTOS: The many movies of Woody Allen

Allen, who had kept mum all week, responded in a New York Times letter of his own which went online Friday night. "Of course, I did not molest Dylan," said the filmmaker, whose "Blue Jasmine" is up for three Academy Awards and first Broadway musical is a month from beginning previews. "No one wants to discourage abuse victims from speaking out, but one must bear in mind that sometimes there are people who are falsely accused and that is also a terribly destructive thing." 

Some of the most vocal and aggrieved reactions to Farrow's letter have often come from women under 40. These include 27-year-old "Girls" creator Lena Dunham, who called Farrow's words "courageous"; film director Miranda July, 39, who tweeted an excerpt of a 1976 People magazine interview in which Allen joked about sharing a love nest with 12-year-old girls; and 17-year-old fashion blogger Tavi Gevinson, who engaged in a conversation with her Twitter followers about whether she could still watch Allen's movies.

"I've loved his movies and cited them over the years but I don't want to contribute any more to a culture that tells survivors of abuse that their voices do not matter," Gevinson tweeted.

It's predictable, perhaps, that the demographic most outwardly troubled by the renewed allegations is a group more likely to identify with 29-year-old Dylan Farrow than with her 78-year-old father.

PHOTOS: Behind the scenes of movies and TV

"It's not surprising that a new generation has found Woody Allen, cause he makes great movies," Allen biographer Eric Lax said. "For people 40 and above, they've already lived through this cycle 20 years ago. They made up their minds one way or another. But like the 20-year cicada, this thing has popped up again."

Many in Allen's younger female audience began to know him in the midst of his recent, late-career successes, a period in which he has cast appealing actresses like Scarlett Johansson, Rachel McAdams and Cate Blanchett and swoon-worthy leading men like Owen Wilson, Jonathan Rhys Meyers and Javier Bardem.

They're also a group more apt to be frank about sexual abuse. According to the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System, around 1 in 5 girls in the U.S. suffers some form of sexual molestation during childhood. While rape is an ancient issue, talking openly about it is a relatively recent phenomenon.

Women under 40 have grown up attending Take Back the Night rallies on their college campuses and reading blog entries about sexual abuse on websites like Buzzfeed and Jezebel; a post on Buzzfeed from this past week, a beginner's guide to rape culture, has been recommended on Facebook 31,000 times.

PHOTOS: Woody Allen's highest grossing films

"Sensibilities have changed," said Illinois writer Roxane Gay, 39, who penned a piece supportive of Dylan Farrow on Salon. "We're more inclined now to give the victim the benefit of the doubt. As a woman who's experienced sexual violence, I'm predisposed to believe the victim."

Many of the young women sharing their feelings about Dylan Farrow on social media aren't old enough to remember the first time the director's family drama erupted publicly, after Allen began dating Mia Farrow's 19-year-old adopted daughter, Soon-Yi Previn, whom he later married. At that time an investigative team from the Yale-New Haven hospital said they found no evidence that Allen abused Dylan, and suggested that she had been coached, but a Connecticut judge awarded custody of Allen and Farrow's three children to Farrow.

The story, dormant for 21 years, resurfaced this fall in the form of a Vanity Fair article that included interviews with Mia, Dylan and seven of Mia's other 14 children.

The outrage took root on social media. During the Golden Globe Awards last month, as Diane Keaton accepted a Cecil B. DeMille Award on Allen's behalf, Dylan's younger brother Ronan tweeted, "Missed the Woody Allen tribute — did they put the part where a woman publicly confirmed he molested her at age 7 before or after Annie Hall?," a comment which has since been retweeted more than 12,000 times.

PHOTOS: Celebrities by The Times

On Saturday, Dylan's letter appeared on the New York Times website, on the blog of Nicholas Kristof, who wrote a column about it. (The Los Angeles Times Opinion editors were also approached about running an op-ed written by Dylan Farrow and decided not to publish it.)

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Jumaat, 7 Februari 2014

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Ignore the Unemployment Rate - Wall Street Journal

Posted: 07 Feb 2014 08:44 AM PST

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Wall Street Journal

Ignore the Unemployment Rate
Wall Street Journal
The unemployment rate is one of the most consequential numbers shaping our body politic. Unfortunately, it is also one of the most misleading, says Zachary Karabell. Zuma Press. Today at 8:30 a.m., the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics released its monthly ...
Weak January hiring offset lower jobless rateKansas City Star
US hiring fails to rebound strongly from winter chillReuters
US Unemployment Drops to 5-Year LowVoice of America
Businessweek -San Francisco Chronicle -Deseret News
all 396 news articles »

2014 Sochi Olympics live: Rainbow-colored coats, a ring that fails to open - Los Angeles Times

Posted: 07 Feb 2014 08:43 AM PST

The 2014 Winter Olympics opening ceremony is underway in Sochi, Russia, and among the athletes marching into Fisht Olympic Stadium was the German team, which appeared to be making a pro-gay-rights statement in rainbow-colored coats.

The teams of athletes began their march into the stadium soon after the start of the ceremony. Venezuela made an impression with the size of its contingent: three -- "one dancing with a flag, one taking video, a third just looking left out," says the L.A. Times' Bill Plaschke.

Among sights leading up to the athletes' entrance: platforms illustrating the different landscapes of Russia floated through the stadium; tATu -- a group described as a psuedo-lesbian pop duo -- performed, which was interesting given the uproar over Russia's anti-gay laws; and the Ministry of Internal Affairs choir sang.

One Olympic goof was making the rounds on social media. Five massive illuminated snowflakes were supposed to open into the Olympic rings, but one remained a flake.

The U.S. athletes are wearing Ralph Lauren gear for the opening ceremony -- including a chunky, patchwork knit wool cardigan  emblazoned with stars, stripes and patriotic graphics. 

Although there is no streaming video of the 2014 Winter Olympics opening ceremony in real time, you can get a sneak peek here with our reporters and others tweeting the ceremony from Russia. See our live coverage below. (Here's a version for mobile users.)

The ceremony will be shown at 7:30 p.m. PST on NBC in its entirety.

How to watch the Olympics online | ... and on TV

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Khamis, 6 Februari 2014

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Bullish FY13 results lift DiGi share

Posted: 06 Feb 2014 06:41 PM PST

DiGi.Com Bhd's shares increased 1.443 per cent this morning as the stock became attractive following its better-than-expected 2013 financial year results posted yesterday.

As at 10am, the telecommunication services provider's share rose seven sen to RM4.92, with 6.858 million lots changing hands.

DiGi.Com registered a higher pre-tax profit of RM1.705 billion for the financial year ended December 31, 2013 against RM1.205 billion recorded in the previous financial year.

Revenue grew to RM6.733 billion in the period under review from RM6.360 billion registered in 2012.

The company declared a total dividend of 21.30 sen per share for 2013, including an interim dividend of 7.05 sen per share in the fourth quarter.

HwangDBS Vickers Research said DiGi.Com was poised for growth in the current financial year.

"We think DiGi will enjoy earnings upside from subscriber gains as a result of expanding 3G population coverage, greater mobile internet usage and stable margins through cost efficiencies.

"Moreover, depreciation expenses would be lower as its new network has a longer useful life and was built at a lower cost compared to its legacy network," the research house said in a note today.

The research firm has upgraded DiGi to a 'buy call, with a higher target price of RM5.35, after increasing its terminal growth assumption to two per cent from 1.5 per cent.

HwangDBS said that it was optimistic on DiGi's earnings outlook, given its strengthening position in the prepaid segment.

Meanwhile, Kenanga Research said DiGi is expected to deliver between four and six per cent revenue growth in the FY14, higher than the industry average of four per cent.

Following the projection, the research house has maintained its 'outperform' rating on DIGi.Com, with unchanged target price of RM5.24.

Kenanga Research had also raised its FY14 and FY15 net profit forecasts on DiGi by 6.7 per cent and 2.5 per cent, respectively, after fine-tuning and lowering the depreciation cost assumption.-- Bernama

UEM Sunrise, KL Kepong in Iskandar jv

Posted: 06 Feb 2014 07:13 PM PST

UEM Sunrise Bhd and Kuala Lumpur Kepong Bhd will jointly develop two projects in Iskandar Malaysia, Johor generating RM20 billion in gross development value.

The first project is the 2,500 acres Fraser Metropolis, which will comprise residential, industrial and commercial properties worth RM15 billion to be developed over 15 years.

The second development is the 500 acres Gerbang Nusajaya featuring residential and commercial properties worth RM5 billion to be developed over eight years.

Both parties formalised two separate agreements today for the planned joint venture developments.

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Competition begins at Winter Olympics after DHS issues toothpaste tube ... - Fox News

Posted: 06 Feb 2014 08:21 AM PST

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security warned Wednesday that terrorists may try to smuggle explosives on Russia-bound planes using toothpaste tubes.

The threat was passed on to airlines that have direct flights to Russia, including some that originate in the United States, according to a law enforcement official speaking Wednesday on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss details of the warning, which came hours before competition began at the Winter Olympics in the Black Sea resort town of Sochi, Russia. 

The official said the airlines were warned that explosive devices could be assembled in flight or upon arrival at the Olympics.

The department said in a statement that the U.S. "isn't aware of a specific threat to the homeland at this time." It said the department "regularly shares information with domestic and international partners, including those associated with international events such as the Sochi Olympics."

Delta Airlines is the only U.S. carrier with a direct flight from the United States to Moscow. Russian airlines Aeroflot and Transaero both operate several nonstop flights from the U.S.

United Airlines, the official airline of the U.S. Olympic team, does not have scheduled service to Russia but is operating some charter flights to Sochi.

Earlier Wednesday, Russia investigators said security forces killed a militant who may have helped train the two suicide bombers who struck the southern city of Volgograd.

The bombings of a train station and an electric trolleybus in late December killed 34 people and heightened security fears of the Olympics.

Competition began 32 hours before Friday's opening ceremony due to the addition of 12 new medal events for men and women. Men's slopestyle snowboarding was the first event to get underway, and was scheduled to be followed by women's slopestyle, women's moguls, and team figure skating. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Judge orders Texas teen Ethan Couch to rehab for driving drunk, killing 4 - CNN

Posted: 06 Feb 2014 07:41 AM PST

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • The lock-down residential treatment facility is not identified
  • The teen's family will foot the bill
  • Couch was sentenced to 10 years' probation but no jail time

(CNN) -- A judge on Wednesday ordered that Ethan Couch -- who drove drunk and caused a crash, killing four people and injuring two -- go to a lock-down residential treatment facility.

State District Judge Jean Boyd had already decided the Texas teenager would serve no jail time. He was sentenced last year to 10 years' probation.

His story made national headlines after a witness claimed Couch was a victim of "affluenza" -- the product of wealthy, privileged parents who never set limits for the boy.

That particular defense, however, played no part in the judge's decision, Couch's lawyer told reporters on Wednesday. Court proceedings were closed to the public.

"She (Boyd) said it (affluenza), and specifically mentioned that that was not a basis for her decision," said attorney Reagan Wynn. "She heard all the evidence and she made what she thought was the appropriate disposition."

'Affluenza' defense psychologist: 'I wish I hadn't used that term'

The judge ordered that Couch's parents pay for the treatment facility, which was not identified. It was also unclear how long Couch might stay there.

As part of his probation, the teen must refrain from using drugs or alcohol. He will also not be allowed to drive. If Couch violates the terms of his probation, he could face up to 10 years behind bars.

"I think he can be rehabilitated given intensive therapy and I hope that he gets it," Wynn said about the teen. "The juvenile system is about rehabilitation and if it's going to be about rehabilitation, she (Boyd) absolutely made the right decision."

Eric Boyles, who lost his wife and daughter in the crash, disagrees.

He told reporters he has no doubt that money played a role in the case.

Steering teen drivers out of harm's way

"Had he (Couch) not had money to have the defense there, to also have the experts testify, and also offer to pay for the treatment, I think the results would have been different," he said Wednesday after the proceedings.

Last June, his wife, Hollie Boyles, and daughter, Shelby, left their home to help Breanna Mitchell, whose SUV had broken down. Brian Jennings, a youth pastor, was driving past and also stopped to help.

All four were killed when the teen's pickup plowed into the pedestrians on a road in Burleson, south of Fort Worth. Couch's vehicle also struck a parked car, which then slid into another vehicle headed in the opposite direction.

Opinion: 'Affluenza' isn't as crazy as it sounds

Two people riding in the bed of the teen's pickup were tossed in the crash and severely injured. One is no longer able to move or talk because of a brain injury, while the other suffered internal injuries and broken bones.

According to prosecutors, three hours after the crash, tests showed Couch had a blood alcohol content of 0.24, three times the legal limit.

"There has been nothing from Ethan from these proceedings with regards to remorse on his part at all -- that I do think would have helped. It would have helped the victims. No doubt about it, it would have helped," said Boyles.

Prosecutors were similarly disappointed with the judge's decision.

They had asked for the maximum of 20 years behind bars.

"This has been a very frustrating experience for me," said prosecutor Richard Alpert. "I'm used to a system where the victims have a voice and their needs are strongly considered. The way the system down here is currently handled, the way the law is, almost all the focus is on the offender."

'Affluenza': Is it real?

CNN's Jason Morris and Ed Lavandera contributed to this report.

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Rabu, 5 Februari 2014

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KLCI futures higher in early trade

Posted: 05 Feb 2014 06:11 PM PST

The FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) futures contract (FKLI) on Bursa Malaysia Derivatives opened higher on buying interest despite the weaker cash market.

At 9.32am, spot month February 2014 was six points better at 1,784, March 2014 gained 5.5 points to 1,783 and September 2014 rose seven points to 1,781.5.

June 2014 was flat at 1,773.

Turnover amounted to 1,200 lots while open interest totalled 32,733.

The benchmark FBM KLCI was 0.22 of-a-point lower at 1,785.66 points after 32 minutes of trading.-- Bernama

Gold down 20 sen

Posted: 05 Feb 2014 06:15 PM PST

[unable to retrieve full-text content]The physical price of gold as at 9.30am stood at RM129.49 per gramme, down 20 sen from RM129.69 at 5pm yesterday.-- Bernama
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CVS calls it quits: No more tobacco products - USA TODAY

Posted: 05 Feb 2014 08:56 AM PST

WASHINGTON — Drug store giant CVS Caremark announced Wednesday it will no longer sell tobacco products at its 7,600 pharmacies by Oct. 1.

CVS sells $2 billion in tobacco and tobacco-related products a year, or 3% of overall sales, but CVS officials said selling cigarettes while promoting wellness doesn't make sense.

"Selling tobacco is very inconsistent with being in that business," said Helena Foulkes, CVS's pharmacy president. "We really thought about this decision as it relates to the future as a health company — it's good for customers and our company, in the long run."

Foulkes told USA TODAY that CVS sees its future as an alternative to the doctor's office, with 26,000 pharmacists and nurse practitioners counseling customers about how to control their high cholesterol, diabetes and high blood pressure.

"Any form of tobacco use makes those chronic conditions more difficult to deal with," she said. "This is good for business and the right thing to do."

President Obama — a former smoker — hailed the announcement, saying in a statement Wednesday: "As one of the largest retailers and pharmacies in America, CVS Caremark sets a powerful example, and today's decision will help advance my administration's efforts to reduce tobacco-related deaths, cancer, and heart disease, as well as bring down health care costs — ultimately saving lives and protecting untold numbers of families from pain and heartbreak for years to come."

STORY: Obama applauds CVS decision on tobacco

CVS officials met with tobacco company executives Tuesday to explain the decision, understanding that eliminating tobacco products from the pharmacies would likely affect the tobacco industry's bottom line, as well.

"Obviously, you would think they would be disappointed about the decision," said Larry Merlo, CEO of CVS Caremark, of the meeting with the officials. But he said they understood the rational behind the decision. And it probably won't be a huge loss for them: Morgan Stanley issued an analysis Wednesday stating that CVS probably accounts for about 2% of industry sales.

"We do not believe that CVS's exit — or the potential exit of other pharmacy chains in the future — will reduce total sales," the statement reads.

Other pharmacies are expected to eventually follow suit, and some cities in California and Massachusetts have banned tobacco sales at all pharmacies. The American Pharmacists Association asked for a ban on sales in 2010 at pharmacies, including at grocery stores that have pharmacies, according to an article published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) Wednesday

As the Affordable Care Act is implemented, it's important to help people stay healthy, said Troy Brennan, the company's chief medical officer.

"It's expensive to provide health care for all the people through the ACA," Brennan said. The company will announce a "very large" smoking cessation program in the spring.

Foulkes said seven out of 10 smokers would like to stop, and half have tried to in the past year.

Ezekiel Emanuel, a University of Pennsylvania bio-ethicist and one of the architects of the health care law, said he sees smoking as one of the top health issues facing the United States. He agrees that reducing smoking-related costs is important as more people become insured so others don't have to take on the burden of those costs and called working to reduce smoking "kind of a no-brainer."

CVS expects to lose about $2 billion in sales annually, Foulkes said, but the company hopes to recoup its losses in other ways, including an increased focus on its pharmacy management benefit program to help insurers save money on employees' health. Merlo said the change would not affect their bottom line.

And while they intend to look at other ways to push a health-oriented focus, Merlo said they had no plans to eliminate alcohol or candy from the pharmacies, saying that "occasional use does not cause the problems that tobacco does." Instead, they intend to focus on keeping tobacco out of the hands of young people so they don't begin lifelong addictions, he said.

More than 480,000 people die from smoking-related ailments a year, according to the JAMA article by Brennan and Steven Schroeder, director of the Smoking Cessation Leadership Center at the University of California.

Smoking has gone down significantly, from 42% of adults in 1965 to 18% today. This comes after increases in taxes, and public areas — such as airports, bars and federal buildings — where smoking is prohibited. Advertising also diminished the appeal of smoking. Just this week, the American Cancer Society launched an advertising campaign aimed at how teenagers would look in the future if they begin smoking now. Still, 42 million people smoke and 16 million are sick, according to JAMA.

The Rhode Island-headquartered company maintained that its exit from the tobacco category will not affect its 2014 operating profit guidance. Its shares are down about 1% in pre-market trading.

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Source: 4 arrested in connection with drugs in Hoffman's apartment - CNN

Posted: 05 Feb 2014 08:24 AM PST

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: Police release names of suspects, all facing drug-related charges
  • Police found Hoffman's personal journal in his apartment, sources say
  • Source: Police recover 350 bags of what is believed to be heroin
  • Hoffman withdrew $1,200 from ATM the night before he died, source says

New York (CNN) -- Four people believed to be connected to the drugs found in Philip Seymour Hoffman's apartment were arrested late Tuesday night, law enforcement officials told CNN.

During the raid that led to the arrest of the three men and one woman, police recovered 350 glassine-type bags of what is believed to be heroin, the officials said.

Apartments at 302 Mott Street in Manhattan, where the four were arrested, are part of the investigation into Hoffman's death, according to a police source.

The source identified suspects being investigated in connection with drugs sold to Hoffman as Juliana Luchkiw, 22, charged with criminal use of drug paraphernalia, criminal possession of a controlled substance and unlawful possession of marijuana; Max Rosenblum, 22, charged with criminal use of drug paraphernalia, criminal possession of a controlled substance and unlawful possession of marijuana; Robert Vineberg, 57, charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance and criminal use of drug paraphernalia; and Thomas Cushman, 48, charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance.

Vineberg was found to have the actor's phone number stored in his cell phone, a law enforcement official told CNN.

When police were called to Hoffman's fourth-floor Manhattan apartment Sunday, they found the actor lying on the bathroom floor with a syringe in his left arm. He was wearing shorts and a T-shirt, his eyeglasses still resting on his head, according to law enforcement sources familiar with the inquiry.

Investigators discovered close to 50 envelopes of what they believed was heroin in the apartment, the law enforcement sources said. They also found used syringes, prescription drugs and empty glassine-type bags, the sources said.

Also found in Hoffman's apartment was his personal journal, resting on a living room TV stand, two law enforcement sources said.

Hoffman's final hours

No fentanyl found

Preliminary tests Tuesday showed the heroin recovered from the apartment does not contain fentanyl, a law enforcement official told CNN. More testing will be done.

Fentanyl is a powerful narcotic used to treat cancer patients' pain.

Last week, Maryland officials said heroin tainted with fentanyl had claimed at least 37 lives since September. And last month, at least 22 people in western Pennsylvania died after using heroin mixed with fentanyl.

While results of an autopsy will definitively reveal exactly how Hoffman, 46, died, the role heroin may or may not have played is a key part of the investigation.

Final hours

Police are trying to piece together the actor's movements last weekend as they look for anyone who might be linked to the drugs that apparently killed him.

On Tuesday, a law enforcement source told CNN that the night before Hoffman died, he withdrew $1,200 from a grocery store ATM near his apartment.

Hoffman got the money in six transactions Saturday night, according to the source.

A witness told investigators he saw the Oscar-winning actor talking to two men wearing messenger bags about 8 p.m.

Police are also reviewing surveillance video, including video of a restaurant where Hoffman had brunch Saturday morning with two people.

How heroin kills you

'I'm a heroin addict'

In a 2011 interview with "60 Minutes," Hoffman discussed his past struggles with drug and alcohol addiction.

"Anything I could get my hands on, I liked it all," he said.

Fear, Hoffman said, made him sober up.

"You get panicked. ... I was 22 and I got panicked for my life. It really was, it was just that," he said. "And I always think, 'God, I have so much empathy for these young actors that are 19 and all of a sudden are beautiful and famous and rich.' I'm like, 'Oh my God. I'd be dead.'"

But last year, Hoffman said he'd fallen off the wagon, started taking prescription pills and slipped into snorting heroin, according to TMZ.

Magazine writer John Arundel said he met the actor at the Sundance Film Festival in Utah two weeks before his death.

"I said, 'What do you do?' And at that point, he took off his hat and he said, 'I'm a heroin addict,'" Arundel said.

"Didn't look like he was (joking). Seemed like he was having one of those 'coming to God' moments -- where it just stuck him as, 'this is the revelatory moment.'"

But actor George Clooney said he had dinner with Hoffman a few months ago, and he seemed fine.

"I have to say he seemed in pretty good shape," Clooney said. "I mean, there's no way to explain it."

Filmmaker Chris Barrett interviewed Hoffman January 17 at the Sundance Film Festival. "He didn't look well at Sundance. His skin color was very pale, but he wasn't disheveled as some media was reporting," Barrett told CNN.

Dim the lights

Family and close friends of the actor will hold a private funeral service in New York. Plans are also under way for a memorial service later this month. No information on the dates was available.

On Wednesday night, the famed Broadway theater district will dim its marquees for one minute at 7:45 p.m. in Hoffman's memory.

Hoffman appeared on Broadway three times.

CNN's Ray Sanchez in New York contributed to this report.

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