Monday, April 30, 2007

Overkill in New Orleans

By Daniela Crespo and Jeremy Scahill, AlterNet. Posted September 12, 2005.


Heavily armed paramilitary mercenaries from the Blackwater private security firm, infamous for its work in Iraq, are openly patrolling the streets of New Orleans. Some of the mercenaries say they have been "deputized" by the Louisiana governor; indeed some are wearing gold Louisiana state law enforcement badges on their chests and Blackwater photo identification cards on their arms. They say they are on contract with the Department of Homeland Security and have been given the authority to use lethal force. Several mercenaries we spoke with said they had served in Iraq on the personal security details of the former head of the U.S. occupation, L. Paul Bremer and the former U.S. ambassador to Iraq, John Negroponte.

"This is a totally new thing to have guys like us working CONUS (Continental United States)," a heavily armed Blackwater mercenary told us as we stood on Bourbon Street in the French Quarter. "We're much better equipped to deal with the situation in Iraq."

Blackwater mercenaries are some of the most feared professional killers in the world and they are accustomed to operating without worry of legal consequences. Their presence on the streets of New Orleans should be a cause for serious concern for the remaining residents of the city and raises alarming questions about why the government would allow men trained to kill with impunity in places like Iraq and Afghanistan to operate here. Some of the men now patrolling the streets of New Orleans returned from Iraq as recently as two weeks ago.

What is most disturbing is the claim of several Blackwater mercenaries we spoke with that they are here under contract from the federal government and the state of Louisiana. Blackwater is one of the leading private security firms servicing the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan. It has several U.S. government contracts and has provided security for many senior U.S. diplomats, foreign dignitaries and corporations. The company rose to international prominence after four of its men were killed in Fallujah and two of their charred bodies were hung from a bridge in March 2004. Those killings sparked the massive U.S. retaliation against the civilian population of Fallujah that resulted in scores of deaths and tens of thousands of refugees.

Who Sent In the Mercs?

As the threat of forced evictions now looms in New Orleans and the city confiscates even legally registered weapons from civilians, the private mercenaries of Blackwater patrol the streets openly wielding M-16s and other assault weapons. This despite Police Commissioner Eddie Compass' claim that, "Only law enforcement are allowed to have weapons."

Officially, Blackwater says its forces are in New Orleans to "join the Hurricane relief effort." A statement on the company's website, dated Sept. 1, advertises airlift services, security services and crowd control. The company, according to news reports, has since begun taking private contracts to guard hotels, businesses and other properties. But what has not been publicly acknowledged is the claim, made to us by two Blackwater mercenaries, that they are actually engaged in general law enforcement activities including "securing neighborhoods" and "confronting criminals."

That raises a key question: under what authority are Blackwater's men operating? A spokesperson for the Homeland Security Department, Russ Knocke, told the Washington Post he knows of no federal plans to hire Blackwater or other private security. "We believe we've got the right mix of personnel in law enforcement for the federal government to meet the demands of public safety," he said.

But in an hour-long conversation with several Blackwater mercenaries, we heard a different story. The men we spoke with said they are indeed on contract with the Department of Homeland Security and the Louisiana governor's office and that some of them are sleeping in camps organized by Homeland Security in New Orleans and Baton Rouge. They told us they not only had authority to make arrests but also to use lethal force.

Where the Real Action Is

We encountered the Blackwater forces as we walked through the streets of the largely deserted French Quarter. We were talking with two New York City police officers when an unmarked car without license plates sped up next to us and stopped. Inside were three men, dressed in khaki uniforms, flak jackets and wielding automatic weapons. "Y'all know where the Blackwater guys are?" they asked. One of the police officers responded, "There are a bunch of them around here," and pointed down the road.

"Blackwater?" we asked. "The guys who are in Iraq?"

"Yeah," said the officer. "They're all over the place."

A short while later, as we continued down Bourbon Street, we ran into the men from the car. They wore Blackwater ID badges on their arms. "When they told me New Orleans, I said, 'What country is that in?'" one of the Blackwater men said. He was wearing his company ID around his neck in a carrying case with the phrase "Operation Iraqi Freedom" printed on it. After bragging about how he drives around Iraq in a "State Department issued level 5, explosion-proof BMW," he said he was "just trying to get back to Kirkuk [in the North of Iraq] where the real action is."

Later we overheard him on his cell phone complaining that Blackwater was only paying $350 a day plus per diem. That is much less than the men make serving in more dangerous conditions in Iraq.

Two men we spoke with said they plan on returning to Iraq in October. But, as one mercenary said, they've been told they could be in New Orleans for up to six months. "This is a trend," he told us. "You're going to see a lot more guys like us in these situations."

If Blackwater's reputation and record in Iraq are any indication of the kind of services the company offers, the people of New Orleans have much to fear.

Friday, April 27, 2007

What really happened in Atlanta


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 04/27/07

According to federal documents released Thursday, these are the events that led to Kathryn Johnston's death and the steps the officers took to cover their tracks.

Three narcotics agents were trolling the streets near the Bluffs in northwest Atlanta, a known market for drugs, midday on the Tuesday before Thanksgiving.

Eventually they set their sights on some apartments on Lanier Street, usually fertile when narcotics agents are looking for arrests and seizures.

Gregg Junnier and another narcotics officer went inside the apartments around 2 p.m. while Jason Smith checked the woods. Smith found dozens of bags of marijuana — in baggies that were clear, blue or various other colors and packaged to sell. With no one connected to the pot, Smith stashed the bags in the trunk of the patrol car. A use was found for Smith's stash 90 minutes later: A phone tip led the three officers to a man in a "gold-colored jacket" who might be dealing. The man, identified as X in the documents but known as Fabian Sheats, spotted the cops and put something in his mouth. They found no drugs on Sheats, but came up with a use for the pot they found earlier.

They wanted information or they would arrest Sheats for dealing.

While Junnier called for a drug-sniffing dog, Smith planted some bags under a rock, which the K-9 unit found.

But if Sheats gave them something, he could walk.

Sheats pointed out 933 Neal St., the home of 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston. That, he claimed, is where he spotted a kilogram of cocaine when he was there to buy crack from a man named "Sam."

They needed someone to go inside, but Sheats would not do for their purposes because he was not a certified confidential informant.

So about 5:05 p.m. they reached out by telephone to Alex White to make an undercover buy for them. They had experience with White and he had proved to be a reliable snitch.

But White had no transportation and could not help.

Still, Smith, Junnier and the other officer, Arthur Tesler, according to the state's case, ran with the information. They fabricated all the right answers to persuade a magistrate to give them a no-knock search warrant.

By 6 p.m., they had the legal document they needed to break into Kathryn Johnston's house, and within 40 minutes they were prying off the burglar bars and using a ram to burst through the elderly woman's front door. It took about two minutes to get inside, which gave Johnston time to retrieve her rusty .38 revolver.

Tesler was at the back door when Junnier, Smith and the other narcotics officers crashed through the front.

Johnston got off one shot, the bullet missing her target and hitting a porch roof. The three narcotics officers answered with 39 bullets.

Five or six bullets hit the terrified woman. Authorities never figured out who fired the fatal bullet, the one that hit Johnston in the chest. Some pieces of the other bullets — friendly fire — hit Junnier and two other cops.

The officers handcuffed the mortally wounded woman and searched the house.

There was no Sam.

There were no drugs.

There were no cameras that the officers had claimed was the reason for the no-knock warrant.

Just Johnston, handcuffed and bleeding on her living room floor.

That is when the officers took it to another level. Three baggies of marijuana were retrieved from the trunk of the car and planted in Johnston's basement. The rest of the pot from the trunk was dropped down a sewage drain and disappeared.

The three began getting their stories straight.

The next day, one of them, allegedly Tesler, completed the required incident report in which he wrote that the officers went to the house because their informant had bought crack at the Neal Street address. And Smith turned in two bags of crack to support that claim.

They plotted how they would cover up the lie.

They tried to line up one of their regular informants, Alex White, the reliable snitch with the unreliable transportation.

The officers' story would be that they met with White at an abandoned carwash Nov. 21 and gave him $50 to make the buy from Neal Street.

To add credibility to their story, they actually paid White his usual $30 fee for information and explained to him how he was to say the scenario played out if asked. An unidentified store owner kicked in another $100 to entice White to go along with the play.

The three cops spoke several times, assuring each other of the story they would tell.

But Junnier was the first to break.

On Dec. 11, three weeks after the shooting, Junnier told the FBI it was all a lie.

Ex-CIA boss charges White House twisted slam dunk comment

Ex-CIA Director George Tenet


WASHINGTON - In his score-settling memoir, ex-CIA Director George Tenet blasts the Bush White House for manipulating his infamous "slam dunk" comment to scapegoat him for Iraq.

His book, "At the Center of the Storm," also seeks to shift the blame from his own agency to the FBI for not following leads that might have prevented 9/11.

Tenet, CIA chief from 1997 to 2004, says the White House leaked his remark to make it seem that he was claiming there was proof Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. What he really meant, he says, was that President Bush could make a "slam dunk case" to Americans for invading Iraq. "The hardest part," Tenet told CBS' "60 Minutes," in an interview being broadcast Sunday, was watching Vice President Cheney go on TV last year "and say, 'Well, George Tenet said slam dunk,' as if he needed me to say 'slam dunk' to go to war with Iraq."

Tenet said the administration hung him out to dry, ruining his career and his reputation.

"It's the most despicable thing that ever happened to me," he says on the program. "You don't do this. You don't throw somebody overboard just because it's a deflection. Is that honorable? It's not honorable to me."

In his book, due out Monday, Tenet spends an entire chapter denying that the CIA could have thwarted the Sept. 11 attacks, the Daily News has learned.

The chapter, titled "Missed Opportunities," takes the FBI to task for not chasing the CIA's strongest leads before the 2001 attacks.

That rankled FBI agents, who call Tenet's 575-page tome, written with Bill Harlow, "a novel."

Monday, April 16, 2007

Rising foreclosures reshaping communities


ATLANTA — If you're like most homeowners, you've probably never given much thought to whether your neighbors pay their mortgages on time. You've got enough to worry about.

Dannice Clark was like that. She'd skip newspaper articles about the trouble with "subprime" loans for people with risky credit. While fixing dinner, she'd tune out TV reports on how subprime defaults are accelerating the nationwide pace of foreclosures. Why should she care? She had a fixed-rate loan on a 5,000-square-foot home with two kitchens in Waters Edge, an upscale subdivision in Stone Mountain, just outside Atlanta.

Here's why: Clark has been trying to sell her home for nearly five months and hasn't had one offer — even after cutting the price to $334,900 from $359,000. The problem is that her street is dotted with four foreclosed homes that lenders are trying to unload for less money.

"It's truly affecting the sale of my house," says Clark, 45, who works for the U.S. Postal Service. "Why pay full price for my house when you can pick up a foreclosure for $30,000 or $40,000 less?"

And as thousands of homeowners across the nation are learning, it's not only home values that are being affected by the foreclosure crisis. When foreclosures rise, as they have in Waters Edge and other middle-class areas amid the meltdown of the subprime mortgage market, they can unravel the social fabric and reshape neighborhoods.

The crime rate can rise while the quality of the schools goes down. Homeowner associations can see their treasuries drained. Nearby businesses close their doors, and local tax revenue suffers.

These problems used to be concentrated in poor, urban and minority neighborhoods where mortgage defaults are more common. The real estate boom, turbo-charged by looser lending standards that began in 2000, changed that.

Communities across the country, including some exclusive neighborhoods, have begun to feel the collateral damage of the pandemic use of adjustable-rate mortgages, or ARMs, that required little or no down payments or proof of income.

In the wealthy subdivision of Greenridge in Lithonia, Ga., for instance, 10 homes are for sale from $700,000 to $1.1 million. Six of the owners had interest-only mortgages and couldn't keep up with their rising payments. Four of the homes have gone through foreclosure, says Mike Grier, an agent at Century 21 A-Team.

"The foreclosure trends are definitely accelerating in middle-income suburban communities," says Dan Immergluck, associate professor of city and regional planning at Georgia Institute of Technology.

"What I'm still scared about is the interest-rate resets in the prime market," Immergluck says, referring to the exotic loans made to people with good credit that let them pay only the interest, or even less, until the loans reset to higher rates.

"I'm concerned that could really tip some of these middle- and upper-income neighborhoods, in terms of high foreclosure rates."

Foreclosures expensive

It's difficult to put a dollar figure on the problem. But one study in the Chicago metro area found that each foreclosure costs the municipal governments there more than $30,000, according to the Homeownership Preservation Foundation. One foreclosure will shave up to 1.5% off the value of the other homes on the same block, Immergluck's research found.

But there are other costs, harder to measure, such as feeling increasingly unsafe as foreclosures seep into your community, says Laura Walker, a retired human resource executive.

She fought for years to combat rampant mortgage fraud and foreclosures in Waters Edge by tracing the names of con artists who were buying and selling in the areas, as well as their accomplices, and lobbying authorities to take action.

"We saw evidence of insurgency from drug dealers and criminal activity we certainly did not want," as homes began to empty and thefts in the area increased, she recalls. "It added a sour note about what kind of community we were turning into. We had to get vigilant to let others know we care about our properties and we don't want these unsavory types of people in our communities."

Conditions in Waters Edge have improved recently, but 50 homes are for sale in the neighborhood, 21 of which are foreclosures, says Century 21's Grier.

Georgia wasn't even among the states with the most foreclosures at the end of last year. The most desperate stories are in Rust Belt cities and suburbs in Ohio, Michigan and Indiana, where job losses — the No. 1 reason people lose their homes — are magnifying the fallout.

What's perhaps most worrisome about the rise in loan defaults in the Atlanta area is that what's happening here is beginning to show up in dozens of economically vibrant cities, such as Miami, Sacramento and Boston. Foreclosure rates across the nation are likely to continue to rise through next year as homeowners with ARMs see their payments jump.

A projected 2 million subprime borrowers will lose their homes to foreclosure by the end of this year, according to the Center for Responsible Lending. And that estimate was made late last year, before tougher lending rules began shutting out some homeowners, who might be unable to refinance once their ARMs reset to higher rates.

The difficulties are worse in inner-city areas where poverty and joblessness have been compounded by the troubles that shadow foreclosures.

When John-Paul and Heidi Chandonia moved to Atlanta's Washington Park neighborhood in 2001, they thought it was enjoying an urban renaissance. But once the real estate boom arrived, many residents sold. Homes were flipped from one buyer to another and, in many cases, no one moved in.

Half the homes on the Chandonias' street are now vacant. Some have gone through foreclosure more than once.

A new, two-story home around the corner was vandalized around Christmas. The doors are off their hinges; the heating, ventilation and air-conditioning unit is gone — stolen for the copper coils, which are peddled on the black market. A few doors down, a heroin addict has moved into a vacant home, John-Paul says.

Heidi has called the city's building-code-enforcement department many times, but little has changed. She's contacted neighborhood groups and city officials. But the Chandonias' part of Washington Park continues to decline. In May, a neighbor was dragged behind a vacant house and raped.

That's when Heidi said, "I give up." They put their home on the market. It took a year to get an offer. They now have a buyer and could move by the end of the month.

"Our neighbors want to get out of there, too," says Heidi, 26, who works for an association that builds affordable housing. "It's been too much. It's gotten worse and worse and worse. … It's been extremely stressful just to watch it go downhill and feel that there's not anybody paying attention."

In the upper-middle-class neighborhood of Smoke Rise, 18 miles east of Washington Park, Ann Fulman has had the same feelings.

Her area was one of the early targets of mortgage fraudsters, and she remembers how hard it was convincing regulators and law enforcement that mortgage-paying residents like her were victims as much as the lenders.

"We started talking to law-enforcement agencies, saying, 'We're victims. Come help us,' " she recalls. "They said, 'You're not victims.' … And I said, 'What do you mean, I'm not a victim? I'm living with strippers and convicted arsonists and drug dealers. There are meth labs in my neighborhood. Hello!' "

As homes fall into foreclosure, a neighborhood frequently turns more transient. Investors often buy homes in foreclosure and rent them out if they can't sell them.

"You end up with a very fragmented community," Fulman says. "When investors buy them and turn them into rental property, it can be Section 8 (a government rental assistance program). Not that there's anything wrong with that, but folks come in from a different background with different expectations and don't have the means to keep up the place."

Local schools also suffer when people lose their homes in large numbers. Foreclosures can disrupt not only the tax base of an area, but also the classroom environment.

"It definitely affects education in many ways," says Deborah Crawford, a fourth-grade teacher at Pine Ridge Elementary in Stone Mountain. "This year is very transient. There's a teacher two doors down from me; he started with 22 students in August and only has 10 of the same kids now. How hard is that to adjust to?"

Teachers must spend more time with new students, who are "upset about moving," she says. "It's hard to merge kids in like that. You have to assess them to see where they are (academically). It's unfortunate, but sometimes they get lost" trying to keep up.

Many local governments have been caught off-guard by the economic and social domino effect of foreclosures.

At the end of January, Atlanta officials and non-profit organizations launched an ad campaign to make residents aware of a national foreclosure prevention program and toll-free hotline (888-995-HOPE or 888-995-4673). They hoped to get 5,000 calls from people in Atlanta this year. They blew past that figure last month.

In the suburbs of Gwinnett County, the police department recently created a Quality of Life unit to address problems often associated with foreclosures. Working with other government agencies, the unit targets such issues as building-code enforcement, vagrancy and graffiti. But their powers and resources are limited.

At a town hall meeting last week, residents in a Stone Mountain neighborhood were upset about a vacant home on their block, says Maj. Dan Branch, who heads the unit for the police department.

"Although it's in foreclosure, the bank is not taking ownership, and the people who own the house are not taking ownership, and this house is run down," Branch says. "There are nine (building-code) violations on the house. Teenagers are breaking into it. We can't legally go in. The house is vacant, run-down. It's horrible."

'It's a death spiral'

Last week, all the officers from the Quality of Life unit were temporarily reassigned to try to catch a rapist. Such steps make it difficult to focus resources on less-threatening neighborhood problems.

In some cases, the task of protecting a neighborhood falls to local groups and non-profits. "If you don't have a strong community association with leaders who care and roll up their sleeves and do something, it's a death spiral," Fulman says.

Some states, such as Ohio, have started funds to help cash-strapped homeowners restructure their loans to avoid foreclosure. In Congress, there are proposals to get the Federal Housing Administration to help homeowners with ARMs.

But there's no quick fix. And as foreclosures mount, the spillover effect on suburbanites could worsen before it improves. In Waters Edge, Clark is not only feeling like a victim of foreclosures in her neighborhood; she may soon be part of the problem in another.

She's got a fixed-rate loan on the home she lives in, but when she refinanced her second home 3½ years ago, the mortgage broker "pulled a bait-and-switch on me," she says, and gave her an ARM.

The house, in a nearby subdivision, also had an inflated appraisal, so she owes about $20,000 more than it's probably worth. Meantime, her monthly payment on the second home has jumped from $567 to $1,148, far more than the monthly rent she collects on it.

"I'm going to have to sell it," she laments. "I went out and bought a for-sale sign and am going to try to sell it myself, or it's going to have to go into foreclosure."

Has your community been affected by foreclosures? Are you worried about your mortgage? Tell us your experiences:

Friday, April 13, 2007

Missing E-Mail May Be Related to Prosecutors




April 13, 2007

WASHINGTON, April 12—The White House said Thursday that missing e-mail messages sent on Republican Party accounts may include some relating to the firing of eight United States attorneys.

The disclosure became a fresh political problem for the White House, as Democrats stepped up their inquiry into whether Karl Rove and other top aides to President Bush used the e-mail accounts maintained by the Republican National Committee to circumvent record-keeping requirements.

It also exposed the dual electronic lives led by Mr. Rove and 21 other White House officials who maintain separate e-mail accounts for government business and work on political campaigns — and raised serious questions, in the eyes of Democrats, about whether political accounts were used to conduct official work without leaving a paper trail.

The clash also seemed to push the White House and Democrats closer to a serious confrontation over executive privilege, with the White House counsel, Fred F. Fielding, asserting that the administration has control over countless other e-mail messages that the Republican National Committee has archived. Democrats are insisting that they are entitled to get the e-mail messages directly from the national committee.

Representative Henry A. Waxman, the California Democrat who is chairman of a House committee looking into the use of political e-mail accounts, wrote a letter to the attorney general on Thursday saying he had “particular concerns about Karl Rove” after a briefing his aides received from Rob Kelner, a lawyer for the Republican National Committee.

Mr. Rove uses several e-mail accounts, including one with the Republican National Committee, one with the White House and a private domain account that is registered to the political consulting company he once owned. Mr. Waxman said Mr. Kelner reported that in 2005, the national committee adopted a new policy, specifically aimed at Mr. Rove, which “removed Mr. Rove’s ability to personally delete his e-mails from the R.N.C. server.”

Mr. Waxman also said he now had “serious concerns about the White House’s compliance with the Presidential Records Act,” a 1978 law that requires administrations to keep records of deliberations, decisions and policies. The congressman asked for an inventory of all communications by White House officials on nongovernment e-mail accounts.

President Bush has directed the White House counsel’s office to try to recover any missing e-mail messages, but Scott Stanzel, the deputy White House press secretary, said it was unclear how much may have been lost. As to whether the missing e-mail related to the prosecutors’ dismissals, Mr. Stanzel said, “It can’t be ruled out.”

Democrats were skeptical that any e-mail messages are truly missing.

“We’re learning that off-book communications are being used by these people in the White House by using Republican political e-mail addresses and they say they have not been preserved,” Senator Patrick J. Leahy, Democrat of Vermont and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said in an impassioned speech on the Senate floor. “I don’t believe that! You can’t erase e-mails, not today.”

Richard M. Smith, an Internet security and privacy consultant in Boston, said Mr. Leahy’s surmise that the missing e-mail messages are preserved somewhere could be right. But he said there was no way to know without a thorough examination of all the computers the messages passed through.

The Democrats’ investigation into the political e-mail accounts grows directly out of the inquiry into the firing of the United States attorneys. When the Justice Department turned over documents to Congress, they showed that, contrary to the White House’s initial assertions, Mr. Rove and Harriet E. Miers, the former White House counsel, seemed to be involved in planning the dismissals.

The documents also revealed that a deputy to Mr. Rove, Scott Jennings, who works in the White House Office of Political Affairs, had used his Republican National Committee e-mail account, ending in gwb43.com, to communicate about the dismissals with a top aide to Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales.

The documents led to demands from Democrats for testimony from Mr. Rove and others; the White House agreed only to off-the-record interviews, and Democrats responded by threatening subpoenas.

Now that Democrats are also demanding access to the political e-mail, the White House took steps on Thursday to use those latest demands as leverage to force Democrats to accept the White House’s conditions for making Mr. Rove and the others available.

In a letter to Mr. Leahy and Representative John Conyers Jr., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Mr. Fielding, the White House counsel, said the administration was prepared to produce e-mail from the national committee, but only as part of a “carefully and thoughtfully considered package of accommodations” — in other words, only as part of the offer for Mr. Rove and the others to appear in private.

Mr. Conyers, a Michigan Democrat, issued a tart reply: “The White House position seems to be that executive privilege not only applies in the Oval Office, but to the R.N.C. as well. There is absolutely no basis in law or fact for such a claim.”

Senator Charles E. Schumer, the New York Democrat who is spearheading the Senate inquiry into the prosecutors’ dismissals, said the Fielding letter “can be summed up in three words: ‘We are stonewalling.’ ”

Mr. Waxman, meanwhile, spent Thursday pushing the committee to release the e-mail. According to the congressman’s account of Thursday’s meeting with Mr. Kelner, the R.N.C. lawyer, as well as an interview with a Republican official familiar with the committee’s e-mail practices, the committee has a large cache of communications from White House officials. But there are none before 2005, when the committee “began to treat Mr. Rove’s e-mails in a special fashion,” Mr. Waxman wrote.

The committee appears to have changed its e-mail retention policies twice, possibly in response to the investigation by a special prosecutor, Patrick J. Fitzgerald, into the leak of the name of a C.I.A. officer. When that inquiry began, in early 2004, the committee’s practice was to purge all e-mail from its servers after 30 days.

But in August of that year, according to the Republican official, the committee decided that e-mail sent by White House officials would be kept on the server. Still, the change did not prevent White House officials from manually deleting their e-mail, and some, including Mr. Rove, apparently did. So in 2005, the committee took steps to prevent Mr. Rove from doing so.

“Mr. Kelner did not provide many details about why this special policy was adopted for Mr. Rove,” Mr. Waxman wrote. “But he did indicate that one factor was the presence of investigative or discovery requests or other legal concerns.”

Now the question is whether the missing e-mail can be recovered. Mr. Smith, the Internet security consultant, said e-mail ordinarily is initially stored in at least four places: in the “sent” file of the computer used to send the message; on the computer server of the sender’s Internet service provider; on the computer server of the recipient’s provider; and on the recipient’s computer.

Even if the message is deleted, it may be recoverable from a computer’s hard drive. Eventually, however, the deleted file may be overwritten and lost, Mr. Smith said.

“If you keep sending e-mails, it will probably get overwritten pretty quickly, and then it’s really gone,” he said.

Scott Shane and David Johnston contributed reporting.

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Housing Boom Tied To Sham Mortgages

Lax Lending Aided Real Estate Fraud

By David Cho
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, April 10, 2007; A01

ATLANTA -- The man was one slick fraud artist.

Phillip Hill lured people to fancy cocktail parties in a $1.9 million mansion. He asked to use their names and credit histories in real estate deals, promising to make them rich. Most got $10,000 checks on the spot for signing up.

By the time the scam unraveled, the credit of those participants had been ruined, hundreds of upscale properties had fallen into foreclosure and real estate prices had plummeted in some of this city's most exclusive neighborhoods. Hill is about to go to federal prison.

Many experts have concluded that the nation's real estate boom of recent years was fueled in part by weakened lending standards that sparked excessive demand and drove up prices. Now, some are worried that the looser standards may have permitted a boom of another kind -- a big expansion of mortgage fraud.

No one knows exactly how extensive the crime has become, but new data from the federal government suggest that it has jumped tenfold since 2000. Prosecutors are finding cases all over the country in which sham transactions, based on fraudulent appraisals, led to homes changing hands at far above their real value. Mortgage lenders failed to carry out the most elementary safeguards.

In some neighborhoods, mortgage fraud became so extensive that it drove up overall home prices. That is what happened in Atlanta. Hill, 50, was convicted last month in what authorities call one of the biggest mortgage-fraud cases in U.S. history. It involved 400 fraudulent loan applications; nearly $100 million in mortgages; and 120 closing attorneys, appraisers, mortgage brokers and others who prosecutors say were in on the scam.

Federal prosecutors say this kind of fraud is hardly unique to Atlanta -- the lax lending standards that Hill exploited have existed throughout the country in recent years.

In Broomfield, Colo., Gerald Small pocketed $21.5 million and bought two jets after he got bogus home loans using personal information from people who responded to a help-wanted ad; he was convicted. In Kansas City last year, Brent Michael Barber was sentenced to 12 years in prison for paying residents of a low-income neighborhood $2,000 each to use their names in 300 fraudulent loan applications. In Jacksonville, mortgage broker J.R. Parker and closing attorney Dale Beardsley were convicted in 2005 for a fraud scheme in which they netted $14 million in cash, six luxury cars and two $1 million homes.

Federal law enforcement officers say that with heavy demands on them from homeland security, they have had the resources to shut down only the worst offenders.

"By the time we prosecute, the damage has been done, the neighborhoods are already destroyed and the money is gone," said David E. Nahmias, the U.S. attorney who oversaw the Hill case.

In Atlanta, entire neighborhoods and condominium developments, especially those in affluent areas, were hit by organized fraud rings. Initially, these schemes pumped up housing values for everyone as artificially high appraisals helped the swindlers get inflated loans. Legitimate home buyers rushed in to get a piece of what they thought was a soaring real estate market. Now as the fraud is being exposed, their home values are taking a hit.

As more of these cases come to light around the nation, the question is: How much did an epidemic of fraud contribute to the frenzied housing market of recent years?

Liar Loans and Straw Buyers

Thirty years ago, most Americans got their mortgages at a savings-and-loan association from bankers who obeyed conservative lending rules. But sweeping changes in the finance world have created a far different system. It has helped raise homeownership to record levels, but many real-estate professionals say it also has led to far looser lending standards.

Nowadays, instead of poring over paperwork for weeks, lenders often verify loans through electronic underwriting programs in which numbers can easily be tweaked. About 70 percent of Americans get their home loans from independent mortgage brokers, many of whom are paid bonuses for pushing higher-interest loans.

Close to 90,000 brokers have joined the profession since 2000, according to Wholesale Access, a research firm in Columbia. The field is lightly regulated. Eighteen states do not require criminal checks, the Conference of State Bank Supervisors reports. Undoubtedly, most mortgage brokers are honest, but some have played central roles in recent fraud cases.

The housing boom brought another change. Mortgages are no longer held for long by banks but are packaged together as massive bonds and sold on Wall Street. Propelled in part by demand for these bonds, companies began offering loans that required little or no documentation of borrowers' income.

These "stated income" loans were designed for a limited purpose: giving self-employed people a crack at homeownership. But during the boom, the number of such loans exploded to the point that they became a running joke in the industry, earning the nickname "liar loans." Estimates vary widely, but research suggests that they made up a significant portion of all mortgages during the boom -- 58 percent in a study by First American LoanPerformance.

Mortgage lenders in theory have a right to compare loan documents to a buyer's tax returns, but they rarely do. In the few cases where it has been done, results were startling. In a study published by the Mortgage Asset Research Institute, one lender sampled 100 stated-income loan applicants and found that 90 had exaggerated take-home pay by 5 percent or more and that nearly 60 inflated their pay by more than 50 percent.

Mortgage originators often neglected extensive document verification because it slowed loan approvals. "Everyone in the mortgage industry is trying to approve loans faster than their competitors," said James Croft, founder of MARI in Reston. "They all offer the same basic rates and the same basic mortgage products. But if I can get the loan faster, that gives me a competitive advantage."

Many industry experts say stated-income loans became an invitation to fraud, while mortgage brokers -- paid commissions to put loans through, not slow them down -- often looked the other way.

In this climate, industry people say, fraud of two types became easier.

In the first type, known to law enforcement as "fraud for housing," people lied on their mortgage applications to get into homes they otherwise could not afford. Even on a loan where the buyer is asked to provide no proof of income, lying about it on the application is a federal crime.

A more insidious type -- "fraud for profit" -- also spread. Involving scam artists taking advantage of the looser standards, many of these schemes drew in corrupt appraisers willing to overstate the value of properties, "straw buyers" who were paid to lend their names and credit histories to a transaction, and closing attorneys who kept banks in the dark.

The growth of mortgage fraud has outpaced other types of financial crimes, the Treasury Department reports. From 2002 to 2004, mortgage fraud reports nearly doubled each year. Over that period, mortgage fraud convictions by federal prosecutors fell.

The Treasury Department received a record 37,313 mortgage fraud reports in 2006, 10 times more than in 2000. But the true incidence is almost certainly higher because the government gets reports only from regulated institutions, not including the nation's 53,000 mortgage-broker firms.

"Nobody wants to go in there and expose how big this is," said Chris Klein, a finance manager at Howard Hanna Mortgage Services, a Pittsburgh mortgage broker, echoing the comments of several brokers around the country. "In the industry as a whole, it's a running joke. If you want to get a loan done, any loan, you can get it done."

Hill's 'Business Model'

Phillip Hill allegedly ran small-scale frauds in Florida and elsewhere for years, and he was caught and convicted in one case. But when he arrived in Atlanta in the late 1990s, that past was invisible. It is now apparent that he came to town with big plans.

Described as soft-spoken but charismatic, Hill broke into the city's elite circles by throwing lavish parties at an estate a few blocks from the Georgia governor's mansion. Influential people began coming to him for their housing needs. Hill rented homes to several prominent Atlanta figures, including Robert L. Nardelli, the former chief executive of Home Depot.

Prosecutors said Hill and his accomplices sought short-term loans from friends and associates, including business leaders and professional athletes. The ring bought homes, then transferred them to straw buyers Hill had recruited. Using inflated appraisals and other doctored papers, the group took out big mortgages that allowed it to repay the short-term loans and pocket hefty sums.

Some home prices were inflated by 100 percent or more. One estate was pumped from $1.9 million to $5.5 million in two weeks, according to court documents. Hill's personal take from the scheme is estimated at $14.5 million, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors think most of the straw buyers, some just college students, did not know what Hill was doing with their names and credit histories. Several later testified that Hill's attorney flipped through loan documents so fast at closing that they hardly read what they were signing. Most apparently thought they were becoming the owners of homes Hill would maintain and rent out to make the monthly payments.

In truth, neither happened. Most homes fell into disrepair. Others were stripped of their appliances and fixtures, including the mansion where Hill hosted his cocktail parties. As the scam unraveled, more than 300 homes fell into foreclosure.

Mortgage lenders later acknowledged that they failed to perform basic checks into hundreds of Hill loans. They estimated their losses at $41 million. Some of that will be absorbed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the huge government-created housing corporations in Washington that help package home loans into bonds for sale on Wall Street.

At trial, defense attorneys argued that Hill was unaware that his "business model" was against the law and that his underlings doctored loan applications without his knowledge. The jury did not buy it. On March 14, Hill was convicted of 166 counts of fraud and money laundering. He has not been sentenced, but after the verdict, Judge Thomas W. Thrash said Hill "is looking at spending the rest of his life in prison."

Hill's attorney, Bruce H. Morris, said his client maintains his innocence and plans to appeal.

Nine accomplices, including appraisers, real estate agents and closing attorneys, were convicted. Thirteen others pleaded guilty. Many straw buyers saw their credit ruined.

Hardest-hit by the scheme were honest homebuyers. Mortgage fraud experts estimate that Hill's scam, and others like it, have put several thousand homes into foreclosure, driving down values.

Bill Cleary was one of the first to buy a condo in Deere Lofts, in a bustling area in downtown Atlanta. He was lured by the amenities -- hardwood floors, high ceilings -- as well as advertisements glamorizing the area. In 2001, he paid $213,000 for a two-bedroom unit.

Then Hill bought 40 units at a discount from the builder and started flipping them for about $400,000. The non-Hill condos left on the market were quickly snatched up.

But all of Hill's units ended up in foreclosure. Because Hill stopped paying homeowner dues, the condo association nearly went bankrupt and the building went downhill. Three years after Cleary bought his place, comparable two-bedroom units were selling for $130,000. "All of the promises they made went up in smoke," Cleary said of the developers.

Anne Fulmer's neighborhood, in Atlanta's affluent northern suburbs, has been hit by four mortgage fraud rings since the late 1990s.

The scams motivated Fulmer and others to form a coalition of prosecutors, police, homeowners and real estate agents to fight back. The Georgia Real Estate Fraud Prevention and Awareness Coalition got a tough mortgage-fraud law through the state assembly.

In national surveys, Georgia has been identified as a fraud hot spot. But Fulmer says that is because people there have become so aggressive about identifying the problem. She says she wonders how many homeowners across the country bought in neighborhoods where values were driven up by fraud but don't know it yet.

"It happens everywhere and anywhere," said Fulmer, who is now vice president of Interthinx, an anti-mortgage-fraud company. "If the true scope was discovered, I think it would cause a major crisis."

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Mass Stupidity

Will the last moron to pull his head out of his ass please turn out the lights; the real estate party is over. Real-estate is collapsing nationally, dimming the hopes of many idiots that their retirement will be funded by their house.

Where did they get this assumption in the first place? Why did this myth spring up so fervently and so recently?

Simple, it was concocted by the real-estate industry and their willing accomplices in the mortgage industry with any number of cronies like the appraisal industry aiding and abetting their devious scheme.

We were informed by the industry that you couldn’t go wrong in real estate because real estate never goes down. Suckers all around the country swallowed the bait. They’d get rich by buying and selling each others houses, as if Americans were just now owning houses for the first time ever.

What we’ve learned however was that most Americans weren’t using their house for retirement, they were actually using their houses to maintain their lifestyle. They were borrowing against the house to pay for the house. That’s like eating your own leg to stay alive, it might fill you up a couple of times but in the end it isn’t a very good idea.

How many of us have parents and grand parents who have paid off houses? Did their house make them rich? Why would people come to believe that it was different this time? Because the bubble turned into a mania and people threw good sense out of the window.

Historically, a house is nothing more than just a decent store of wealth. The average 3-4% gain reflects the devaluation of the dollar. The house remains constant.

Yes, some people made a killing selling their house to fools who were caught up in the hysteria. A few people will always make money, but most won’t. This time is no exception.

Monday, April 09, 2007

The benefits of global warming

If there is one thing I have learned over the past twenty years or so its that any time the government declares an emergency you’d better hang on to your wallet. So let me be the first to say, “hold on to your wallet” now that the current crop of legislators have taken up the mantel of global warming.

In the future, global warming and all the accoutrements that go along with it, is going to be the biggest cash cow in many a generation.

When the government starts doling out all of its subsidies and favored status to the myriad hucksters and schemers that are beginning to crop up like mushrooms, rest assured you as the tax payer and consumer will be the one who inevitably feels the pain.

As the national hysteria gains in volume the level of handouts will increase exponentially. Every quack concept or invention supposedly designed to decrease our level of energy dependence will be met with ringing endorsement by some Senator or congressman, with most of these boondoggles never showing any benefit or proof they actually perform the function they were sold to do.

Fortunes will be made in the alternative energy business and long after many of these harebrained schemes are uncovered as fraudulent the perpetrators will be sipping margaritas on a beach somewhere in the Bahamas.

A new boom will surely follow just like the tech boom which preceded it, this time instead of dot com it will be any stock with the word “alternative” in it that goes through the roof. Millionaires and billionaires will be created overnight who will then wind up in the poor house in the inevitable bust.

The ones for whom a few million in stock options aren’t enough will ride the wave all the way up until the point they end up doing the perp walk ala Bernie Ebbers and Ken Lay for bilking their companies retirement funds and assorted other larcenies. There will be a few of those for sure.

But the people who will suffer the most, as is always the case, will be the ones who can least afford it. Even now, because of the fraud that ethanol can lower the cost of gasoline; any product containing corn will be higher this year at the grocery store. Not only will products containing corn be higher (practically all soda contains corn syrup), but so will dairy products. The demand for corn has dramatically increased, since now it is seen as an alternative fuel and the increased pressure has in turn doubled the cost of feed for livestock. Increased feed costs equal increased production costs for milk, cheese and any other dairy product that ends up in the grocery store. This has already begun to happen.

With the demand for corn sure to escalate, more farmers will plant corn which means that less grain will be farmed, that will in turn send up the cost for bread and any other grain dependent products. The trivial amount of ethanol production will have little or no impact on the price of gasoline, but the impact of higher demand for corn will have a substantial impact on prices at grocery stores nationwide.

Ethanol is just the first of many usufructs that will be foisted onto the citizenry as the United States engages in it’s charade of weaning itself from oil and reducing CO2 emissions. None of these measures will be successful or even very serious until Americans are forced to change due to oil being altogether unavailable. But the issue as always will be dolled up in flowery language and will most assuredly be for the benefit of the children and big business will jog for position at the trough of government contracts and handouts while the taxpayer will take it in the wallet.


http://thedailyobfuscation.blogspot.com/2007/07/popcorn-prices-popping-thanks-to.html



Schools aid and abet kid's bad health

Removing Schools' Soda Is Sticky Point
Bottlers' Contracts Limit Cash-Strapped Districts

By Annys Shin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, March 22, 2007; D03

Less than a year after the nation's largest beverage companies pledged to remove high-calorie drinks and limit sugary beverages in all schools, districts across the country are finding that they may not be able to afford the switch because of contracts they signed several years ago with bottlers for the companies.

When Portland, Ore., recently wanted to remove diet soda and sports drinks from high school vending machines and cafeterias, school officials found that they would have to pay the local Coca-Cola bottling company $600,000 to do so. In Racine, Wis., officials decided not to remove high-calorie drinks from high schools earlier this year after they learned they would have to pay the local Pepsi bottler $200,000.

A majority of schools have exclusive marketing agreements with bottling companies -- almost 75 percent of high schools, 65 percent of middle schools, and 30 percent of elementary schools.

The contracts, which can last up to 10 years, typically grant the exclusive right to market a company's brands in school vending machines, on scoreboards and on cups at sporting events in exchange for a large upfront payment followed by yearly payments. There are penalties if a school does not meet sales targets or if a school changes the mix of beverages sold.

In the Washington area, most school districts have not had to choose between money from soda sales and meeting tougher nutrition standards because they did not enter into exclusive beverage contracts.

In Maryland, sodas are only sold after school and, thus, are not subject to new federal or state nutrition requirements, said district spokeswoman Katherine O'Malley-Simpson. Therefore, the contract did not require changing. An exception is in Charles County, where the public schools signed a 10-year contract with Coca-Cola that ends in 2010.

Last May, Coca-Cola, Pepsi and Cadbury Schweppes, the three largest companies in the industry, signed a voluntary agreement to remove high-calorie sodas from schools by 2009.

The agreement, brokered by the Alliance for a Healthier Generation, a project sponsored by the William J. Clinton Foundation and the American Heart Association, came in response to a tripling of child obesity rates among school-age children since 1980. Children consume 35 to 50 percent of their calories during the school day, the alliance said.

The three major beverage companies, which operate separately from local bottlers, said they would make "diligent efforts" to ensure that current and future contracts with bottlers abide by a set of voluntary guidelines.

The guidelines include offering elementary school students milk, water and fruit juice instead of high-calorie soda; and offering high school students water, no-calorie or low-calorie drinks, such as diet soda, milk and light juices, including sports drinks.

In most cases, carrying out the guidelines requires altering existing beverage contracts. Wisconsin's Racine Unified School District, for example, had to change its agreement with its Pepsi distributor.

After years of budget problems, school closings and teacher layoffs, the Racine school system signed a 10-year marketing agreement with the Pepsi bottler in 2000, which came with an upfront payment of $450,000 and an annual payment of about $200,000, which included a percentage of drink sales and $25,000 for items such as scoreboards.

The district wanted to apply its new nutrition guidelines to beverages in September but found that required repaying about $200,000 of the upfront payment, said Nicholas Alioto, the district's chief operating officer.

"Fiscally we're not in a position to give the money back," he said, and the school system would wait until the contract ends in 2010.

In Oregon, the Portland school district had received a $1.2 million payment in 2002 and would have had to repay about $600,000 if it changed the contract. The district has been in negotiations with the Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Oregon about the contract.

Some consumer advocates contend that the contracts make the industry's voluntary agreement meaningless.

"Many school districts are stuck with a deal with the devil. . . . The schools could buy out the contract, but this is about kids and school districts that are strapped for cash" said Deborah Pinkas, a Portland lawyer who, along with another lawyer, Nicola Pinson, wrote a study on beverage contracts.

Kevin W. Keane, a spokesman for the American Beverage Association, said bottlers could not be expected to take a financial hit to implement the guidelines. "Schools ask for money upfront," Keane said. "So companies have made an investment. If you're going to alter that dramatically, the one side is going to bear the brunt of the financial pain, which isn't fair."

The industry is aware that changing existing contracts would take time and gave itself three years to implement the voluntary agreement, Keane said. The Alliance for a Healthier Generation estimates high-calorie sodas and drinks would be removed from 75 percent of school vending machines and cafeterias by the start of the 2008 school year and from every school by 2009.

Sunday, April 08, 2007

Party on - Herald Tribune, FL

Party on

As the three-year-long real estate boom wound down, mortgage lenders such as New Century Financial Corp. came up with a bad idea: Instead of tightening lending criteria as the markets became less liquid, they loosened them in order to keep the party rolling.

It did, at least for a time.

As late as 2006, many subprime lenders were making loans with little or no cash-down requirements to credit-challenged borrowers.

Those decisions are now coming home to roost across the nation.

"Not only are we going to see massive foreclosures in the market, but as you can see, the subprime lenders are falling out like flies," said Priscilla Gratton, a 20-year Sarasota mortgage banking veteran who recently left AmSouth to open her own shop, the Gratton Mortgage Group, in downtown Sarasota.

"There are so many mortgage originators out there whose only goal was closing a transaction."

Too often, businesses making loans inflated incomes, fudged application data or simply did not tell customers the truth about the real costs, over time, of the loans they were being sold.

Particularly popular was the adjustable-rate mortgage, or ARM, which allowed some marginal buyers to get into a home for a couple of years before the rates reset, many times to unsustainable levels.

In the last six months, more than two-dozen subprime lenders have shut their doors.

The biggest player, New Century, filed for bankruptcy protection from its creditors last week.

It issued $51.6 billion worth of subprime mortgages last year, second only to HSBC.

During the past 10 years, New Century underwrote as many as 4,000 loans locally, property records show.

Some portion of those and other subprime defaults could eventually wind up among already bloated real estate inventories.

"It appears that as subprime and FHA (Federal Housing Assistance) loans default at higher than anticipated rates, and lenders tighten their underwriting standards, we're going to continue to see a spike in the number of homeowners facing foreclosure," said James J. Saccacio, RealtyTrac's chief executive.

Fall-out from subprime

Some experts watching the unraveling of the subprime market think that lenders might foreclose on up to 2 million more homes in the next two years as defaults climb to about $225 billion.

Within that time, about $1 trillion in adjustable-rate mortgages will reset at higher rates. Of those, $650 billion, or 65 percent, are in the subprime category, meaning that as many as one-third of subprime borrowers could default if predictions hold.

The likely fallout will be that the lending industry will tighten its standards, and that will prevent many without sterling credit from buying a home. That, in turn, would boost inventory levels at a time when Southwest Florida already has an unusually high number of homes for sale.

A crunch is something that Zandi, the Moody's economist, worries about, too. A scenario where prime borrowers are less able to buy property might be the greatest threat right now to the economy, he said.

Add to that problem the reality that many investors, particularly hedge funds and foreign banks and governments -- the traditional secondary buyers of mortgage-backed securities -- are increasingly out of the game, Zandi said.

Intervention and hot lines

In a sign of the times, a Miami-based nonprofit entity called the Florida Foreclosure Prevention Hotline was launched recently as a resource for homeowners facing the prospect of losing their homes.

Damara Cohn, a real estate agent who works with the hot line, considers herself a foreclosure workout expert.

If after all avenues have been explored and tried, from refinancing to forbearance, Cohn steps in to "help those people who are upside down in their loans or have no chance to sell their property.

"I take the most aggressive position possible with lenders and work with them in order to create a win-win situation for everyone involved."

What Cohn is talking about is called a "short sale," where a lender agrees to take less money than it is owed.

With the softness in the market, many banks and lenders are likely to be more amenable to that kind of arrangement.

"Most borrowers have no idea the alternatives they have available to them," Cohn said. "For some, however, they are in a position where the sale of the property is the only choice.

"Act quickly," she advises. "Once you know you are in an impossible situation with regard to paying the loan, take action.

"This will protect not only your financial interests, but can keep that foreclosure off of your credit report."

Some of the nation's largest banks also are trying to help borrowers avoid foreclosures.

CitiMortgage is contacting ARM borrowers months ahead of reset dates.

Bank of America is using predictive computer models to identify and reach out to potential problem borrowers.

The bank will work with borrowers, even to the extent of "re-underwriting" the mortgage at reduced interest rates, said Bob Caruso, Bank of America's national mortgage servicing executive.

"We want to keep customers in their homes."

Staff writers Maurice Tamman and Cindy Allegretto contributed to this report

Last modified: April 08. 2007 4:58AM

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Daily Reckoning - Bill Bonner

We opined the other day that it is not absolute wealth that the average
man cares about, but relative wealth. A man in an Indian village doesn't
envy the American with air-conditioning and two cars in his garage. He
envies the man down the street with a half-acre more of garden space.

An American may be perfectly content to vote Republican when Ronald Reagan
is in the White House and he thinks everyone is getting rich. But when the
slump comes, he looks around and sees things differently. He begins to
look for a New Deal. Not since the '20s, in America, have so many people
had so little while so few others have had so much. The many, pressing
their noses to their television screens and gaping at their rich neighbors
like the mob facing Marie Antoinette...are likely to want a change.

Then, the scoundrels and scalawags will have their day at last. The old
politics of envy will make a comeback. "Soak the rich," they will say.
"Hang the profiteers"... "Power to the people..."

Envy does not permit a free society. People say they value liberty, but
they can't stand what it produces. They can't stand the fact that - left
to their own devices - some people will have more than they do and some
will struggle to survive. Redistribute income, tax, control, regulate -
they will support almost any measure that promises to make the outcome
more to their liking. They will ask (and in some cases demand) that their
leaders control everything - income levels, interest rates, health care,
parking, handicapped access, what the schools teach, what language people
speak, who can marry whom, what goes into the sausages - even the
weather!

The rascals in every major political party all share the same basic
opportunistic creed. They differ in style, not in substance; one clown
wears patrician blue...the other a plebian red. One favors a plan whereby
government pays all medical expenses. Another offers reimbursements. Still
another offers subsidies and tax incentives to various favored projects.
Every one of them believes in taking something from one citizen and giving
it to another.

But envy is not the only reason for the triumph of collectivism. We are,
by nature, collective animals - like our monkey relatives. We may no
longer live in trees, but we still live in groups. And we look to our
neighbors - not to ourselves alone - for food, shelter, comfort,
companionship, direction, religion, opinions, and much more.

Yes, in theory, all of these relationships could be managed in a free,
consensual, collegial and civilized way - in which persuasion and honest
trade are used instead of violence and force. Most of our private lives
are run that way. We do not threaten the baker for a loaf of bread. Nor,
for the most part, do we take our wives like Sabine women; we are taken by
them...seduced, not stolen.

But public life is different. Without the iron hand of the state behind
him, mass man feels a little lost...vulnerable...and lonesome. How will he
eat, unless his neighbors are forced to give him bread? Who will look out
for him in his retirement, unless the younger generation is forced to pay
into Social Security? Who will protect him from terrorists, if his armed
forces are not properly locked and loaded? A little bit of humble
reflection might show him that he would be better off by relying on his
own wits...but not one man in ten is prepared to do it.

The world might be a better place if people were free...but it would not
be the place it is.

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

The 2008 Federal Budget

April 2, 2007


The fiscal year 2008 budget, passed in the House of Representatives last week, is a monument to irresponsibility and profligacy. It shows that Congress remains oblivious to the economic troubles facing the nation, and that political expediency trumps all common sense in Washington. To the extent that proponents and supporters of these unsustainable budget increases continue to win reelection, it also shows that many Americans unfortunately continue to believe government can provide them with a free lunch.

To summarize, Congress proposes spending roughly $3 trillion in 2008. When I first came to Congress in 1976, the federal government spent only about $300 billion. So spending has increased tenfold in thirty years, and tripled just since 1990.

About one-third of this $3 trillion is so-called discretionary spending; the remaining two-thirds is deemed “mandatory” entitlement spending, which means mostly Social Security and Medicare. I’m sure many American voters would be shocked to know their elected representatives essentially have no say over two-thirds of the federal budget, but that is indeed the case. In fact the most disturbing problem with the budget is the utter lack of concern for the coming entitlement meltdown.

For those who thought a Democratic congress would end the war in Iraq, think again: their new budget proposes supplemental funds totaling about $150 billion in 2008 and $50 billion in 2009 for Iraq. This is in addition to the ordinary Department of Defense budget of more than $500 billion, which the Democrats propose increasing each year just like the Republicans.

The substitute Republican budget is not much better: while it does call for freezing some discretionary spending next year, it increases military spending to make up the difference. The bottom line is that both the Democratic and Republican budget proposals call for more total spending in 2008 than 2007.

My message to my colleagues is simple: If you claim to support smaller government, don’t introduce budgets that increase spending over the previous year. Can any fiscal conservative in Congress honestly believe that overall federal spending cannot be cut 25%? We could cut spending by two-thirds and still have a federal government as large as it was in 1990.

Congressional budgets essentially are meaningless documents, with no force of law beyond the coming fiscal year. Thus budget projections are nothing more than political posturing, designed to justify deficit spending in the near term by promising fiscal restraint in the future. But the time for thrift never seems to arrive: there is always some new domestic or foreign emergency that requires more spending than projected.

The only certainty when it comes to federal budgets is that Congress will spend every penny budgeted and more during the fiscal year in question. All projections about revenues, tax rates, and spending in the future are nothing more than empty promises. Congress will pay no attention whatsoever to the 2008 budget in coming years.


Rep. Ron Paul