This is an FBI investigation document from the Epstein Files collection (FBI VOL00009). Text has been machine-extracted from the original PDF file. Search more documents →
FBI VOL00009
EFTA00259898
86 pages
Page 61 / 86
4
+ IBA
THE PALM BEACH POST
•
MONDAY, JUNE 15. 2009
The Palm Beach Post
Who would Jesus outsource?
Epstein
•
AMC TAYLOR. Publisher
TIM BURKE, Executive Editor
RANDY SCHULTZ, Editor of the Editorial Page
Avoid another `firestorm
It's been slightly more than a year
since teacher Wendy Portillo let her
kindergarten students at Morning-
side Elementary in Port St. Lucie
"vote" 5-year-okl Alex Barton out of
her classroom. We said that Ms. For-
tino should not be allowed to teach
again. We still think that reinstating
— her is a mistake.
But the district didn't
fire her. And last week
the St. Lucie County
School
Board
unani-
mously decided not to
revoke
Ms.
Portillo's
Portillo
long-term contract and
place her on a year-to-
year contract that would have made it
easier to dismiss her. The board, how-
ever. did vote to uphold Ms. Portillo's
one-year suspension without pay. The
suspension is over in November.
The case attracted worldwide at-
tention, and school board member
Kathryn Hensley summed up its
effects: "This became an emotional
firestorm that crucified everybody."
As far as Ms. Portillo goes, the best
thing is to declare the case closed.
She has paid a price in humiliation
and salary. She will be under scru-
tiny if she returns to the classroom.
With the decision about the in-
dividual teacher concluded, other
issues become more important.
Alex's mother. Melissa Barton. has
Issues go beyond one St. Lucie
County teacher
said that her son — who later was
diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome
— had been making progress since
the incident. She has worried, how-
ever. about the message it sends if
Ms. Portillo gets to teach again. She
also says that people unhappy with
her for pressing the case against Ms.
Portillo have threatened her. Clearly.
Alex will need continued help from
his parents, the district, health-care
professionals and possibly the police.
Most important is for the district
to follow through with proposed
changes to prevent this kind of thing
from happening. Ms. Portillo did not
have sufficient training or support
when faced with a very disruptive
child who had been identified as
needing special instruction.
The district has a number of prob-
lems. It faces big budget cuts even
as its FLAT scores, SAC results and
the percentage of students passing
Advanced Placement tests all lag
behind state averages. Such district-
wide problems could overshadow
issues with students such as Alex.
If that happens, sooner or later there
will be another firestorm.
TALK
Should Wendy Portillo be allowed back
in the classroom?
PalmBeachPostcom/opinionzone
Unseal the Epstein deal
A rich, middle-aged Palm Beacher
who preyed on girls almost 40 years
younger already has received too
many breaks from the system. He
doesn't deserve another.
In July 2008, at the age of 55 and
after paying the equiva-
lent of a small country's
gross domestic product
in legal fees, Jeffrey
Epstein escaped federal
charges and pleaded
guilty in state court to
a pair of charges related
to his luring five girls
-ages 14 to 17 — to
his house. The girls undressed and
' massaged him in return for $200 to
$300. He's serving only 18 months
in the Palm Beach County Jail, and
he's serving only nights. And now he
wants just one more favor.
When Epstein entered his state
plea, the terms of his federal deal
were sealed from the public. That
violated normal procedures. Attor-
neys for some of the victims, who
have filed civil lawsuits, want that
plea deal unsealed, probably because
the details would help their cases.
But given the nature of this case,
there's also a public interest. One con-
dition of the federal plea. for example.
was that he take the state deal. That's
why The Past also is seeking to have
the file unsealed. Epstein's lawyers,
Palm Beach sex offender
deserves no more breaks.
of course, want it kept secret. Last
week, a Palm Beach County judge
set a hearing for June 25.
Epstein attorney Jack Goldberger
claims that the file should stay sealed
to protect the "orderly administration
of justice" and "protect a compelling
government interest." Oh, and third
parties might get hurt. The compel-
ling interest is Epstein's, and there
is no privacy issue since the victims
themselves are making the request.
Palm Beach police spent 11
months investigating Epstein, only
to see then-State Attorney Barry
Krischer kick the case to a grand
jury. Mr. Krischer backed off when
one of Epstein's gold-plated attor-
neys, Alan Dershowitz announced
that some of the victims had posted
MySpace comments about their alco-
hol and marijuana use.
Epstein's "best" defense has been
that he didn't know the girls were
underage. "How he verified that,"
Mr. Goldberger said, "I don't know."
Investigators found a high school
transcript in Epstein's house. He
didn't know? The public should know
what Jeffrey Epstein did, and what
the system did for hint
Improving flu symptoms
Six area residents may not like it,
but China's new attitude toward pub-
lic health will mean a safer world.
In 2003, China drew justified
criticism for trying to cover up an
outbreak of severe acute respiratory
syndrome, known as SARS. Authori-
ties worried that the news would hurt
the country's economy. The issue
showed the conflict between the
information-repressing China and
the sell-all-goods-to-the world China.
When it came to public health, China
couldn't have it both ways.
As The Post has reported, some
students from The Benjamin School
were
quarantined, with
almost
no notice, after being exposed to
swine flu. A West Palm Beach ac-
countant who has swine flu also
was quarantined. But last week, the
World Health Organization declared
a swine flu pandemic. China acted
properly. What may seem like over-
reaction now looks good compared
with the within-action six years ago.
We must not be browbeaten
into surrendering our best
rhetoric, actions and images.
We hold NO responsibility
for this death.
OR. TILLER
KILLING
CLAY BEhhtit 'Chattanooga fats Flea the s
"There cannot be two
masters in the management
of business," said George F
Baer, who was master of the
Reading Railroad at the start
of the 20th century. "God in
his infinite wisdom has
put the control of business
into the hands of Christian
gentlemen."
They
lost
control
of
General
Mo-
tors.
GM
now
seems
to be under
the control of
unsaved labor
Tom
unions
that
Blackburn
were
explic-
itly
excluded
by Mr. Baer's
theology of management.
Sharing in the mastery is
"government," a word that
conservatives use the way
a rapper repeats four-letter
words — to shock fans and
sell downloads
A lot depends on what
you mean by "government."
If you are referring to the
ways in which we collective-
ly seek the common good,
government is all of us. and
GM is our problem.
The Obama administra-
tion got in the driver's seat
hoping to avert runaway
unemployment and prevent
the public from being stuck
with the autoworkers pen-
sions and medical care. The
engine was shot, as it turned
out, and the car has no
brakes. We are getting the
unemployment, and prob-
ably will end up with the
pension'- and medical care,
neitht. If which will be as
good tor the retirees as it
was when GM had it.
Along the way, we ran
over people who had loaned
the company money, the
Christ, health care no
longer fit biz models.
bondholders. We will pay a
price for stiffing lenders.
and probably sooner rather
than later. That is a moan for
another column.
For a while after World
War II, American companies
could be warm cocoons.
They paid enough to clothe
and feed a family, and then
they provided more than
ban. Social
rity for old
age and the kind of health
care governments in other
countries pay for with taxes.
They even backed bowling
leagues for the grown-ups
and ball teams for the kids.
Then America went back
to Mr Baer's management
theology and dropped the
sissy stuff. A new genera-
tion of masters discovered
outsourcing. We changed;
GM couldn't. That's how we
all ended up with it.
The change is adored by
people who would have only
a 1-in-4 chance of inserting
a time card correctly. They
say health care can continue
the way it has, with some
tax tweaking even though
the way it runs needs em-
ployers to pay for insurance,
and increasingly they don't.
Maybe I'm reading the
wrong Web sites, but I see
more sympathy for the
downtrodden bankers who
got us into the current mess
than for the folks at GM who
went down with the mess.
The bankers took our mon-
ey, spent some of it lobbying
against the common good.
used their clout to clear the
way back to greed with a
half-baked "stress test" and
now want our tears because
we told them not to use our
money to reward themselves
the way that God in his infi-
nite wisdom wants them to
be rewarded.
As for 'the effort to find
sugar and make lemonade
out of GM, you can stand
around screaming at "so-
cialism" or "Pelicsi, Pelosi,
Pelosi" for all I care, until
the rubes send money. But
if you want Americans to
have health care, you have
to get it through either the
government or companies
like General Motors. And
if you excoriate GM and its
unions for their health care.
you aren't going to get it
through them for very long.
You probably won't get it
through them much longer
anyway, whatever you do. So,
what an, you going to do?
While you think about
it, let me recommend the
article by Dr. Guy Clifton
in the June 8.15 issue of
America magazine. He tells
the story of a friend who
had to wait four months
after the diagnosis of a life-
threatening disease for the
paperwork to go through
to allow her expensive sur-
gery. The "world's greatest
health-care system" paid for
the surgery, but too late. It
lost the patient. Dr. Clifton
counts her as one of 22,000
uninsured Americans who
die prematurely each year
in our system.
To the question of what
you want to do, "nothing",
should not be the answer.
Tom Blackburn is a former
member of The Post Editorial
Board Ills e-mail address is
torn_blackburnejuno.com
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR/Lifeguard layoffs
Saving money not as important as saving swimmers
Palm Beach County's lifeguards need a
lifeline from the county commission.
The recent Post story, "County's crunch:
Layoffs, tax hikes," could have included
more details about proposed layoffs of our
ocean rescue lifeguards. The story stated
that "several" ocean rescue lifeguards
would be laid oft In this case, "several"
means 36 of 83. These lifeguards protect
hundreds of thousands of beach-goers.
They warn us about sharks and rip tor-
rents. They save more lives than most of us
know. The story stated that "an" ocean res-
cue chief would also be laid off. but there is
only one ocean rescue chief.
The city of Lake Worth returned to a full
staff of ocean rescue lifeguards recently,
after an ill-fated experiment of having none
two days per week. Public outcry helped in
the decision to return to full coverage. Palm
Beach County has not had a drowning at a
guarded county beach in at least a decade,
and dozers of lives are saved by lifeguards
each year. laying off one-third of our ocean
rescue guards is a dangerous idea. Public
safety is our first priority, and the Palm
Beach County Commission must find a way
to save our ocean rescue lifeguards.
TOM WARNKE
Lantana
Editor's note: Tom IVarnke founded the
Palm Beach aunty chapter of the Surfrider
Foundation.
What did pair do to get
arrested in N. Korea?
Not many'of the news
items even bothered to men-
tion the crime supposedly
committed by Lisa Ling and
Euna Lee. the two journal-
ists who were au rested by
North Korea. I did discover
that it had something to do
with an inadvertent border
crossing Inadvertent? What
does that mean? There was
an open field between China
and North Korea, and they
were just walking there?
No fence? I think we should
hear more about what they
were supposed to have done.
RAY WICKS
West Palm Beach
Editor's note: The LOS
Angeles Times reported that "it
is not dear whether they ever
actually entered North Korean
territory before being arrested
The families have emphasized
that when Ms. ling and Ms
Accident Just waiting to happen
lifeguard Rick Moore said it all: "Life-
guards do lots more than save swimmers.
We warn beach-goers of rip currents, man
o'svar and other dangers. We put up the
flags for sea conditioas. We answer their
questions. We treat injuries. Just us being
there creates a feeling of security." ("4 Palm
Beach County beaches lose lifeguards.")
We are missing the big picture if we
close more beaches and continue to cut
lifeguards. Tourists flock to our beaches.
The closure of four more beaches and staff
cuts will signal a major accident waiting
to happen. People will continue to visit the
closed beaches, continue to swim and surf,
and continue to meet tip with friends. Now
a drowning will be the victim's own fault be-
cause he swam at a closed beach? I hope the
county lawyers will be prepared to answer
that question when the victim's family sues.
The beach is one of the few places with-
out an admission charge. This poor deci-
sion is not really a surprise. We voted for
those confusing amendments and officials
who promised not to raise taxes. Like it or
not, taxes keep this country functioning.
All those services we enjoyed for so long
are drying up, along with many people's
lives. We will miss walking the beach.
JEAN AND JAMES LA SPINA
Tequesta
lie left the United States. they
had no intention of entering
North Korea."A North Korean
court sentenced the mown to
12 ;ma at hard labor.
Aid terrorist wannabes,
then 'catch' them
Let's see. There are three
or four really stupid guys
down at the bar talking
about wanting to commit ji-
had. They were not Islamist,
but talking tough sounded
good-
So. somebody shows up,
agrees with everything they
arc saying, eggs them on
and gets them bombs and
anti-aircraft missiles they
never could have gotten
without this new friend, and
they pull off a plan that the
new friend helped them
make up. Then they are ar-
rested after huge amounts of
personnel and money have
been put into the protect,
and now the New York Police
Department gets to be a
hero, having saved the workl
from the four people that
they helped train and supply.
Sounds like good, efficient
law enforcement to me.
JOHN BODEN
Delray Beach
Find other way, but
keep Shopper Hopper
I was horrified to read that
Boynton Beach may discon-
tinue the Shopper Hopper
(May 14). I implore the city
to find a better means of cut-
ting costs. The service is the
lifeblood for so many riders,
especially senior citizens and
the handicapped. For many,
alternate forms of travel to
stores would be a financial
burden. There are other op-
tions such as raising the fare
and/or cutting trips in half.
one week to Publix, one week
to Walmart. etc.
LILLIAN BROADWICK
Boynton Beach
HOW TO
WRITE TO
SHE POST
The Palm Beach Post ne'comes original *hers about Issues of interest and material
that has appeared in The Post Letters ate subiect to editing and must include the writees
name. address and daytime phone number. Envelopes *lomat a return address W be
discarded.
Preferred length is a maximum of 200 words. Send e-mail to renerseopostaxn,
taxes to (561) 820-4728 and postal mail to Letters to the Editor, The Palm Beach Post.
P0. Box 24700. West Palm Beach. Fl. 33416-4700.
EFTA00259958
Page 62 / 86
THE PALM BEACH POST • MONDAY, JUNE 15, 2009 15; What Would Happen To Your Family.... If You Died Today? No one likes to think about it, but the fact is it CAN happen to YOU. One of the best ways to help protect your loved ones is to BUY LIFE INSURANCE. Where can you start? Let AccuQuote shop the market for you. We'll find you the best values from among hundreds of products offered by highly-rated companies you know and trust. • Save up to 70% *10 Year Level Premium Term Life Insurance Policy S500.000 Coverage Guaranteed Monthly Premiums • Free life insurance quotes (Preferred Best No Nicotine Use) • Hundreds of products to choose from Age Male Female • Straightforward information 35 40 $15.75 $20.56 $14.00 $17.94 • Attentive customer service 45 $31.06 $27.13 • People who CARE 50 $45.06 $38.06 • Satisfaction guaranteed 55 $77.00 $56.88 . • Peace of mind 20 and 30 year rates also available! Discover why hundreds of thousands of people, JUST LIKE YOU, have already put their trust in AccuQuote to help them obtain over FIFTY BILLION DOLLARS in life insurance coverage. Call today for your FREE life insurance quote at 800-496-9103 or visit us at www.accuquote.com ACCUQUOTE Saving You Money For Life • With annual increases thereafter. Genworth Life Insurance Company, Lynchburg. VA, underwrites Sure Term® 10 (Policy Form No. GE-1420 et al.) Sure Tenn® 10 is term life insurance with guaranteed level pre- miums for 10 years. with annual increases thereafter. Products. benefits and rates may not be available in all states and are subject to issue limitations and to their policy forms. Rates are current as of April 1, 2009. Issue age is insured's age at nearest birthday; rates for other underwriting classes are higher; $50 annual policy fee is included. If premiums are not paid annually, the premiums are adjusted by a modal factor consistent with an annual percentage rate of 8.2% (semi-annual) or 10.8% (guarterty, or monthly electronic funds transfer). In some cases, more coverage may be available for the same or lower premium. 'Satisfaction guaranteed' means that, during the pol r's free look period, you can return the policy for a full refund of any premiums paid. Ask your representatives that you're obtaining the most-coverage for the premium pad. AGO6N 48420 04/23/09 EFTA00259959
Page 63 / 86
16A
THE PALM BEACH POST
•
MONDAY.1UNE 15,2009
The Palm Beach Post
Who would Jesus outsource?
Epstein
A rich. middle-aged Palm Beacher
who preyed on girls almost 40 years
younger already has received too
many breaks from the system. He
doesn't deserve another.
In July 2008, at the age of 55 and
after paying the equiva-
lent of a snail country's
gross domestic product
in legal fees, Jeffrey
Epstein escaped federal
charges and pleaded
guilty in state court to
a pair of charges related
to his luring five girls
—ages 14 to 17 — to
his house. The girls undressed and
massaged him in return for $200 to
$300. He's serving only 18 months
in the Palm Beach County Jail, and
he's serving only nights. And now he
wants just one more favor.
When Epstein entered his state
plea, the terms of his federal deal
were sealed from the public. That
violated normal procedures. Attor-
neys for some of the victims, who
have filed civil lawsuits, want that
plea deal unsealed, probably because
the details would help their cases.
But given the nature of this case.
there's also a public interest. One con-
dition of the federal plea, for example,
was that he take the state deal. That's
why The Post also is seeking to have
the file unsealed. Epstein's lawyers,
ALEX TAYLOR. hiblisher
TIM BURKE, Executive Editor
RANDY SCHULTZ. Editor of the Editorial Page
Avoid another `firestorm
It's been slightly more than a year
since teacher Wendy Portillo let her
kindergarten students at Morning-
side Elementary in Port St. Lucie
"vote" 5-year-old Alex Barton out of
her classroom. We said that Ms. Por-
4a tillo should not be allowed to teach
again. We still think that reinstating
her is a mistake.
But the district didn't
fire her. And last week
the St. Lucie County
School Board unani-
mously decided not to
revoke
Ms.
Port illo's
Paella
long-term contract and
place her on a year-to-
year contract that would have made it
easier to dismiss her. The board, how-
ever, did vote to uphold Ms. Portillo's
one-year suspension without pay. The
suspension is over in November.
The case attracted worldwide at-
tention, and school board member
Kathryn Hensley summed up its
effects: "This became an emotional
firestorm that crucified everybody."
As far as Ms. Portillo goes, the best
thing is to declare the case closed.
She has paid a price in humiliation
and salary She will be under scru-
tiny if she returns to the classroom.
With the decision about the in-
dividual teacher concluded, other
issues become more important.
Alex's mother, Melissa Barton. has
Issues go beyond one St. Lucie
County teacher.
said that her son — who later was
diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome
— had been making progress since
the incident. She has worried, how-
ever, about the message it sends if
Ms. Portilb gets to teach again. She
also says that people unhappy with
her for pressing the case against Ms.
Portillo have threatened her. Clearly,
Alex will need continued help from
his parents, the district. health-care
professionals and possibly the police.
Most important is for the district
to follow through with proposed
changes to prevent this kind of thing
from happening. Ms. Portillo did not
have sufficient training or support
when faced with a very disruptive
child who had been identified as
needing special instruction.
The district has a number of prob-
lems. It faces big budget cuts even
as its FLAT scores, SAT results and
the percentage of students passing
Advanced Placement tests all lag
behind state averages. Such district-
wide problems could overshadow
issues with students such as Alex.
If that happens. sooner or later there
will he another firestorm
TALK
BACK!
Should Wendy Portillo be allowed back
In the classroom?
s.PalmBeachPost.com/opinlonzone
Unseal the Epstein deal
Palm Beach sex offender
deserves no more breaks.
of course, want it kept secret. Last
week, a Palm Beach County judge
set a hearing for June 25.
Epstein attorney Jack Goldberger
claims that the file should stay sealed
to protect the "orderly administration
of justice" and "protect a compelling
government interest" Oh, and third
parties might get hurt. The compel-
ling interest is Epstein's. and there
is no privacy issue since the victims
themselves are making the request.
Palm Beach police spent
11
months investigating Epstein, only
to see then-State Attorney Barry
Krischer kick the case to a grand
jury. Mr. Krischer backed off when
one of Epstein's gold-plated attor-
neys, Alan Dershowitz, announced
that some of the victims had posted
MySpace comments about their alco-
hol and marijuana use.
Epstein's "best" defense has been
that he didn't know the girls were
underage. "How he verified that,"
Mr: Goldberger said. "I don't know."
Investigators found a high school
transcript in Epstein's house. He
didn't know? The public should know
what Jeffrey Epstein did, and what
the system did for him.
Improving flu symptoms
Six area residents may not like it,
but China's new attitude toward pub-
lic health will mean a safer world.
In 2003, China drew justified
criticism for trying to cover up an
outbreak of severe acute respiratory
syndrome, known as SARS. Authori-
ties worried that the news would hurt
the country's economy The issue
showed the conflict between the
information-repressing China and
the sell-all-goods-to-the world China.
When it came to public health, China
couldn't have it both ways.
As The Post has reported• some
students from The Benjamin School
were
quarantined, with almost
no notice, after being exposed to
swine flu. A West Palm Beach ac-
countant who has swine flu also
was quarantined. But last week, the
World Health Organization declared
a swine flu pandemic. China acted
properly. What may seem like over-
reaction now looks good compared
with the underreaction six years ago.
We must not be browbeaten
into surrendering our best
rhetoric, actions and images.
We hold NO responsibility
for this death.
ClAY BOINCrUcKannect, tr„„, c,„ Fyn ,
Tom
Blackburn
"There cannot be two
masters in the management
of business," said George F.
Baer, who was master of the
Reading Railroad at the start
of the 20th century. "God in
his infinite wisdom has
put the control of business
into the hands of Christian
gentlemen."
'they
lost
control
of
General
Mo-
tors.
GM
now
seems
to be under
the control of
unsaved labor
unions
that
were
explic-
itly excluded
by Mr. Baer's
theology of management.
Sharing in the mastery is
"government," a word that
conservatives use the way
a rapper repeats four-letter
words — to shock fans and
sell download&
A. lot depends on what
you mean by "government."
If you are referring to the
ways in which we collective-
ly seek the common good,
government is all of us, and
GM is our problem.
The Mama administra-
tion got in the driver's seat
hoping to avert runaway
unemployment and prevent
the public from being stuck
with the autoworkers' pen-
sions and medical care. The
engine was shot, as it turned
out, and the car has no
brakes. We are getting the
unemployment, and prob-
ably will end up with the
pensior • and medical care,
neilix 'd which will be as
good for the retirees as it
was when GM had it.
Along the way, we ran
over people who had loaned
the company money, the
Christ, health care no
longer fit biz models.
bondholders. We will pay a
price for stiffing lenders,
and probably sooner rather
than later. That is a moan for
another column.
For a while after World
War II. American companies
could be warm cocoons.
They paid enough to clothe
and feed a family. and then
they provided more than
bare Social Security for old
age and the kind of health
care governments in other
countries pay for with taxes.
They even backed bowling
leagues for the grown-ups
and ball teams for the kids.
Then America went back
to Mr. Baer's management
theology and dropped the
sissy stuff. A new genera-
tion of masters discovered
outsourcing We changed:
GM couldn't. That's how we
all ended up with it.
The change is adored by
people who would have only
a 1-in-4 chance of inserting
a time card correctly. They
say health care can continue
the way it has, with some
tax tweaking, even though
the way it runs needs em-
ployers to pay for insurance,
and increasingly they don't.
Maybe I'm reading the
wrong Web sites, but I see
more sympathy for the
downtrodden bankers who
got us into the current mess
than for the folks at GM who
went down with the mess.
The bankers took our mon-
ey, spent some of it lobbying
against the common good,
used their clout to clear the
way back to greed with a
half-baked "stress test" and
now want our tears because
we told them not to use our
money to reward themselves
the way that God in his infi-
nite wisdom wants them to
be rewarded.
As for 'the effort to find
sugar and make lemonade
out of GM, you can stand
around screaming at "so-
cialism" or "Pelosi. Pelosi.
Pelosi" for all I care, until
the rubes send money. But
if you want Americans to
have health care, you have
to get it through either the
government or companies
like General Motors. And
if you excoriate GM and its
unions for their health care,
you aren't going to get it
through them for very long.
You probably won't get it
through them much longer
anyway, whatever you do. So,
what are you going to do?
While you think about
it, let me recommend the
article by Dr Guy Clifton
in the June 8-15 issue of
America magazine. He tells
the story of a friend who
had to wait four months
after the diagnosis of a life-
threatening disease for the
paperwork to go through
to allow her expensive sur-
gery. The "world's greatest
health-care system" paid for
the surgery, but too late. It
lost the patient. Dr. Clifton
counts her as one of 22,000
uninsured Americans who
die prematurely each year
in our system.
lb the question of what
you want to do, "nothing",
should not be the answer.
Tarn Blackburn is a former
member of The Post Editorial
Board. His email address is
tom _blackburn4juno.com
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR/Lifeguard layoffs
Saving money not as important as saving swimmers
Palm Beach County's lifeguards need a
lifeline from the county commission.
The recent Post story, "County's crunch:
layoffs, tax hikes," could have included
more details about proposed layoffs of our
ocean rescue lifeguards. The story stated
that 'several" ocean rescue lifeguards
would be laid off. In this case, "several"
means 36 of 83. These lifeguards protect
hundreds of thousands of beach-goers.
They warn us about sharks and rip cur-
rents They save more lives than most of us
know. The story stated that "an" ocean res-
cue chief would also be laid off, but there is
only one ocean rescue chief.
The city of Lake Abrth returned to a full
staff of ocean rescue lifeguards recently,
after an ill-fated experiment of having none
two days per week. Public outcry helped in
the decision to return to full coverage. Palm
Beach County has not had a drowning at a
guarded county beach in at least a decade.
and dozens of lives are saved by lifeguards
each year. Laying off one-third of our ocean
rescue guards is a dangerous idea. Public
safety is our first priority, and the Palm
Beach County Commission must find a way
to save our ocean rescue lifeguards.
TOM WARNKE
Lantana
Editor's note: Tom IVarrtke founded the
Palm Beach County chapter of the Surfrider
Foundation.
What did pair do to get
arrested in N. Korea?
Not many' of the news
items even bothered to men-
tion the crime supposedly
committed by Lisa ling and
Euna Lee, the two journal-
ists who were arrested by
North Korea. I did discover
that it had something to do
with an inadvertent border
crossing Inadvertent? What
does that mean? There was
an open field between China
and North Korea, and they
were just walking there?
No fence? I think we should
hear more about what they
were supposed to have done.
RAY WICKS
West Palm Beach
Editor's note: The Los
Angela Times reported that 'it
is not clear whether they ever
actually entered North Korean
territory before being arrested
The families have emphasized
that when Ms. Ling and Ms.
Accident Just waiting to happen
Lifeguard Rick Moore said it all: "Life-
guards do lots more than save swimmers.
We warn beach-goers of rip currents, man
o'vrar and other dangers. We put up the
flags for sea conditions. We answer their
questions. We treat injuries. Just us being
there creates a feeling of security." ("4 Palm
Beach County beaches lose lifeguards?)
We are missing the big picture if we
close more beaches and continue to an
lifeguard& lburists flock to our beaches.
The closure of four more beaches and staff
cuts will signal a major accident waiting
to happen. People will continue to visit the
closed beaches, continue to swim and surf,
and continue to meet up with friends. Nov
a drowning will be the victim's own fault be-
cause he swam at a closed beach? I hope the
county lawyers will be prepared to answer
that question when the victim's family sues
The beach is one of the few places with-
out an admission charge. This poor deci-
sion is not really a surprise. We voted for
those confusing amendments and officials
who promised not to raise taxes. Like it or
not, taxes keep this country functioning
All those services we enjoyed for so long
are drying up, along with many people's
lives. We will miss walking the beach.
JEAN AND JAMES LA SPINA
Tequesta
Lee fell the United States, they
had no intention of entering
North Korea." A North Korean
court sentenced the women to
12 years at hard labor
AId terrorist wannabes,
then 'catch' them
Let's see. 'there are three
or four really stupid guys
down at the bar talking
about wanting to commit ji-
had. They were not Islamist,
but talking tough sounded
good.
So, somebody shows up,
agrees with everything they
are saying, eggs them on
and gets them bombs and
anti-aircraft missiles they
never could have gotten
without this new friend, and
they pull off a plan that the
new friend helped them
make up. Then they are ar-
rested after huge amounts of
personnel and money have
been put into the project.
and now the New York Police
Department gets to be a
hero, having saved the world
from the four people that
they helped train and supply.
Sounds like good, efficient
law enforcement to me.
JOHN BODEN
Delray Beach
Find other way, but
keep Shopper Hopper
I was horrified to read that
Boynton Beach may discon-
tinue the Shopper Hopper
(May 14). I implore the city
to find a better means of cut-
ting costs. The service is the
lifeblood for so many riders,
especially senior citizens and
the handicapped. For many,
alternate forms of travel to
stores would be a financial
burden. There are other op-
tions, such as raising the fare
and/or cutting trips in half.
one week to Publix, one week
to Walmart, etc.
LILLIAN BROADWICK
Boynton Beach
HOW TO
WRITE TO
THE POST
The Palm Beach Post welcomes odginal letters about issues of interest and material
that has appeared in The Post Letters are subject to &hang and must include the wtiWs
name. address and daAime phone number. Erwelopes without a return address will be
discarded.
Preferred length is a MaXiMUM of 200 words. Send e-mail to Ietters0PhPosLeom•
taxes to (561) 820-4728 and postal mail to Letters to the Editor. The Palm Beach Post,
P.O. Box 24700. west Palm Beach. FL 33416-4700.
EFTA00259960
Page 64 / 86
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X THE PALM BEACH POST • MONDAY, JUNE 15, 2009 3A. White House warms to co-op plan as health option Serving Palm Beach, Martin and St. Lucie Counties. Authorized Dealer of PGT Windows & Doors A compromise would . 3xpard coverage but with no direct control. The Aewerated Peru WASHINGTON — With Republicans fighting the idea of a government-run health insurance plan. Obama administration officials said Sunday that they are open to a compro- mise: a cooperative pro- gram that would expand coverage with taxpayer money but without direct governmental control. Congress begins work this wet* on putting Presi- dent Obama's goal of uni- versal health coverage into law. But some lawmakers are expected to introduce specific plans that run counter to Obama's political promises. The concessions could be the smoothest way to deliver the bipartisan health-care legislation that the administration seeks by its self-imposed August deadline, officials said. "There is no one-size- fits-all idea," said Health Sibelius and Human Services Sec- retary Kathleen Sebelius. "The president has said, These are the kinds of goals I'm after: lowering costs, covering all Ameri- cans. higher-quality care.' And around those goals, there are lots of ways to get there? Some of those ways, though, run counter to the White House's earlier posi- tions and those of Obama's political base. While supporters from his left have advocated a government-run option — championed by an ailing Sen. Edward Kennedy D- Mass., and his surrogate, Sen. Chris Dodd. D-Conn. — presidential aides and congressional leaders in both parties have sought a speedy compromise. Leading that pack: the cooperative approach, similar to rural utilities that have government financial support but op- erate independently. Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., who chairs the Budget Com- mittee, has offered the co- op idea as a way to avoid a bruising and protracted political wrangle on Capi- tol Hill. "This really isn't, to me, a matter of right or wrong," Conrad said. "This is a Candidate asks that elections be voided as riots persist Ahmadinejad calls the protesters 'weeds that are making problems.' The Washingtoe Ant TEHRAN - A defiant Mir Hossein Mousavi, koding an opposi- tion movement against President Mahmoud Ah- madinejad, called on his supporters Sunday to con- tinue protests against the outcome of the election in which Ahmadinejad was proclaimed the landslide winner. Mousavi asked the influential Guardian Coun- cil to declare the elections void because of fraud and irregularities. Riots erupted for a sec- ond day, with gunshots heard in several locations in Tehran and unrest in the Caspian Sea city of Rasht and the central Iranian city of Shiraz, witnesses said in phone interviews. A large rally is planned by Mousavi sup- porters for this afternoon in Tehran. On Sunday, Ah- madinejad led a vic- tory rally near Vali-e Asr BEN amts/lie Associated Press Supporters of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad react as he speaks at a rally in Tehran on Sunday. Tens of thousands attended waving the nation's flag, the symbol of his campaign, square attended by tens of vied batons as they roamed thousands of people way- the streets in groups on ing Iranian flags, which motorcycles, many wear- his campaign adopted as ing black helmets and its symbol. At an earlier green vests. Ahmadinejad news conference he de- said the demonstrators dared the Iranian elec- were "a few weeds that lions a "true manifestation are making problems" of people's right to decide To cheers, he said there their own destiny." would be no more place for "Some ... say the vote them in Iran. is disrupted, there has In asking the Guardian been a fraud," he said at Council to nullify the elec- the rally. "Where are the lions. Mousavi wrote on his irregularities in the elec- Web site, "I believe this to tion?" be the only way to return Young members of the general trust and sup- Iran's voluntary paramili- port of the people for the tary force, the basal. car- government." The site is now blocked in Iran. The council is a 12- member commission that must validate the elections before an official winner can be declared. Council members are appointed by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, and the head of the judiciary. The council vets candi- dates and has the power to veto laws deemed inconsis- tent with Islam. It has not yet acted, although state media have already pronounced Ahmadinejad the victor. Mousavi complained to the council about interfer- ence from security forces and the use of irregular procedures in the elec- tion. "Those who with great violations have issued re- sults unbelievable for the Iranian nation. are now trying to stabilize those re- sults and start a new era in the history of our nation." Mousavls statement said. He added that the protests were not about him. "They are because of worries over the new method of po- litical life which is being forced onto our country," he wrote. matter of: Where are the votes in the United States Senate?" That political situation has guided most of the talks. While Democrats control both chambers of Congress. they have only 59 senators — one short of the number needed to end a Republican filibuster. Even if Al Franken were seated as Minnesota's sec- ond senator, Kennedy and Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., are suffering health prob- lems that could preclude them from casting votes to end the procedural delay. To offset the numeric challenge, Conrad pro- posed a compromise that drew interest from moderate Republicans, including one who helped Obama pass his economic stimulus plan over GOP objection. it's far preferable to the government-run plan that has been discussed by the administration," said Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine. "We need to better under- stand how it would work. But it's certainly better than a Washington-run plan." Hear The Difference Starkey'" MADE IN THE USA $1,000 OFF Each Our Every Day Low Price On Any Destinr/ZonTm Hearing Instruments —100% Digital— special Limited Offer (Expires 6/30/09) AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH PATHOLOGY, INC. DR. MEL GRANT, CLINICAL DIRECTOR Dr. Kaihnn Wilder • Dr. Arthur iinarnan • Dr. Cheryl Brooks Doctors of Audiology CALL TO SCHEDULE AN APPOINTMENT (561) 649.4006 West Palm Brach 3540 Forest Hill Blvd.. Suite 205 Palen Beall Palm Beach Gardens Wellington (,yin 241 Sunrise Ave 3345 Rums Rd., Suite 304 13005 Southern Blvd , Suite 131 SC Guth O S.•I . 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• 4A LHE PALM BEACH POST • MONDAY, JUNE 15,2009 V Many openings for hackers When credit cards are used, the financial information is passed along multiple systems CREDIT CARD to obtain approval for the purchase. COMPANY PROCESSOR WHEN USED Information is sent to the merchant's bank or a processor Sou't Vaslepied Asks the card company for the cardholder's bank Determines the bank and requests approval CARDHOLDER'S BANK Sends approual back by the same path ASSOCAOID RISS Credit cards vulnerable to fraud, probe finds Many companies do . the bare minimum to protect consumers. . The Associated fins Every time you swipe your credit card and wait for the transaction to be approved, sensitive data including your name and account number are fer- ried from store to bank through computer net- works, each step a poten- tial opening for hackers. And while you may take steps to protect yourself against identity theft, an Associated Press investi- gation has found the banks and other companies that handle your information are not being nearly as cautious as they could. The government leaves it to card companies to design security rules that protect the nation's 50 bil- lion annual transactions. Yet an examination of those industry require- ments explains why so many breaches occur. The rules are cursory at best and all but meaning- less at worst, according to the AP's analysis of data breaches dating to 2005. It means every time you pay with plastic, companies are gambling with your personal data. If hackers intercept your numbers, you'll spend weeks straightening your 2009 Aswisled Pins Mt V*: Pamela LaMotte holds disputed credit card bills from accounts hackers tapped into. mangled credit, though you can't be held liable for unauthorized charges. Even if your transaction isn't hacked, you still lose: Merchants pass to all their customers the costs they incur front fraud. More than 70 retailers and payment processors have disclosed breaches since 2006, involving tens of millions of credit and debit card numbers, according to the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse. Meanwhile, many others likely have been breached and didn't detect it. Even the companies that had the payment industry's top rating for computer security, a seal of approval known as PCI compliance, have fallen victim to huge heists. Companies that are not compliant with the PCI standards — including one in 10 of the medium- size and large retailers in the United States — face fines but are left free to process credit and debit card payments. Most retailers don't have to endure security audits, but can evaluate themselves. Credit card providers don't appear to be in a rush to tighten the rules. They sec fraud as a cost of doing business and say stricter security would throw sand into the gears of the payment system, which is built on speed, convenience and low cost. That is of little consola- tion to consumers who bet on the industry's payment security and losL It took four months for Pamela LaMotte, 46, of Colchester. Vt., to fax the damage after hackers tapped two of her credit card accounts in a breach traced to a Hannaford Bros. grocery store. LaMotte, who was unemployed at the time. says she had to borrow money front her mother and boyfriend to pay $500 in overdraft and late fees — which eventually were refunded — while the banks investigated. "It screwed me up in a major way," she said. La- Motte says she pays more by cash and check now Z OHAR Jewelry & Estate Buyer Toll Free 888-620-2527 GOLD • JEWELRY • DIAMONDS • SILVER t • 111‘l Its,. 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CIA chief chides Cheney's `gallows Politics W's almost as if he's wishing' for another US. attack, he says. The Assoroatrd iwu WASiiiNGTON — CIA Diretjor Leon Panetta says dormer Vice Presi- dent Dick Cheney's eritioinn of the Obama .,dministrat ion's approach :0 ttsrrorism almost sug- gesti: "he's wishing that this boentry would be at- tackle again, in order to make his point." Panetta told The New Yorker for an article in its June 22 issue that Cheney "smons some blood in the water' on the issue of na- tionaisecurity. Cheney has said in Panetta Cheney several interviews that he thinks Mama is making the US. less safe. He has been critical of Obama (or ordering the closure of the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, halting enhanced in- terrogations of suspected terrorists and reversing other Bush administration initiatives he says helped to prevent attacks on the US. 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IN BRIEF U.S. signal locator to search for Air France jet's boxes SAO PAULO. Brazil — A Dutch ship towing a high- tech, US. Navy listening device was set to troll the Atlantic on Sunday in search of data and voice recorders that investi- gators say are key to determining what caused an Air France jet to crash in the Atlantic with 228 people on board. The Navy device, called a Towed Finger Locator, will try to detect emergency audio beacons, or pings, from Flight 447's black boxes, which may he thousands of feet below the ocean surface. Without the recorders. it may be impossible to ever know what caused the Airbus A330 to crash several hundred miles off Brazil's northeastern coast on May 31. Hearing to air VA hospital gear errors CHATTANOOGA, limn. — After months of health worries for more than 10,000 veterans, officials at the Department of Veterans Affairs are to face a congressional panel Tuesday about mistakes they say may have ex- posed patients to HIV and other infectious diseases from equipment used for colonoscopies and other procedures at three Southeast hospitals. The subcommittee scheduled Tuesday's hearing in Washington to discuss VA's disclosure involving endoscopic equipment mistakes at its hospitals in Miami. Murfreesboro, Tenn., and Augusta, Ga, with top agency officials and to receive a yet-unreleased report by the Vics inspec- tor general. CIA fired firms aiding interrogations WASHING — Weeks after President Obama took office, the CIA ex- tended its contract with a firm run by two psycholo- gists who helped intro- duce waterboarding and other harsh methods to the agency's interrogation techniques, according to a news report. Two months later, CIA Director Leon Panetta fired Mitchell, _lessen & Associates and all other contractors that aided the CIA in its interrogations of alleged terrorists, the New Yorker reported this weekend. The firings took place in April. around the same NASA fixes leaky shuttle fuel tank The Associated hiss CAPE CANAVERAL — NASA is repairing a leaky hydrogen gas line on Endeavour's fuel tank in hopes of launching the shuttle on its space sta- tion construction mission Wednesday, four days after the first try was called off. Mother NASA mission. involving a pair of science spacecraft bound for the moon, is scheduled to blast off Wednesday. Top space agency officials will decide today whether to bump the moon mission to make way for Endeavour. Mission management team chairman LeRoy Cain said it's likely En- deavour will go first — if the repair effort Rues well, no other shuttle problems crop up and the weather cooperates. A lot of things have to go our way," Cain said. Hydrogen gas began leaking from a vent line hookup on Endeavour's external tank during fuel- ing early Saturday. and the hours before the sshed- ule° mum's\g ldtoft • ud leak 2ru\t _ "`' ,cj' cushtdt\e‘.4wc" iStVon \'?1(\\* countdown was halted just time the Senate Armed Services Committee re- is ported on the role played en by James Mitchell and ins Bruce lessen in develop- •faint Wig ing "countermeasures to defeat" the resistance of captured enemy detainees from whom intelligence was being sought. — Paint Brach Puss war semen In SAFE, UNIQUE LOCAL I he Palm Beach Post -Whoi Hou Air Duct/ Cleaning Southeast Mutu INSURANCE & INVESTMENT 561-939-4858 • 888.707-6884 3•73 APY* THE NATION v, 0/ Call today to en 0 HIGHEST RATES Bank CD's, Money Markets, 401K, 4038. IRA Now 2 Locations To Serve You! 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• THE PALM BEACH POST • MONDAY, JUNE 15, 2009 13A U.K. reports 1st swine flu death Scotland emphasizes 'that the risk to the general public remains low.' 71tr Associated Pms LONDON -A person with underlying health conditions died of swine flu in Scotland on Sunday — the first reported death from the illness outside the Ameri- cas, health officials said. Britain has been harder hit by the vi- rus — known as HIN1— than elsewhere in Europe. Earlier Sunday, Britain had reported another 61 cases of swine flu. bringing the U.K. total to 1,226 cases. "Tragic though today's death is, I would like to emphasize that the vast majority of those who have HIN1 are suf- fering from relatively mild symptoms," Scottish Health Secretary Nicola Stur- geon said. I would reiterate that the risk to the general public remains low and we can all play our Rart in slowing the spread of the virus by following simple hygiene pmeedures" Health authorities expect to see more swine flu cases and deaths worldwide not that it has been declared a pandemic. The World Health Organization said last week that the virus has not become any more lethal, but is now unstoppable. So far. swine flu appears to be a rela- tively mild virus, and most people who get it do not need treatment to get better. Protect civilians, Karzai tells U.S. commander Thekoneurterihrss KABUL Afghanistan — President Hamid Kauai told the incoming com- mander of U.S. and NAM forces in Afghanistan on Sunday that the most important part of his new mission was to protect Af- ghan civilians. Gen. Stanley McChrys- tal takes up his command today. The four-star U.S. general, a former special forces commander, is ex- pected to bring a fresh ap- r 'I I ROYCE AIR AND HEAT] I 1-800-734-7838 I I Rebates up to $3800 I I I I proach to an increasingly violent eight-year war. President Obama has increased the US. focus on Afghanistan this year. ordering 21,000 additional troops to the country as the US. military begins to pull out of Iraq. Civilian casualties have long been a point of fric- tion between Karzai and the US., and the early warning reflects }Canals impatience over the con- tinued killings of Afghan villagers during military operations. In May, dozens of civil- ians were killed when US. and Afghan troops backed by US. fighter aircraft battled militants in south- western Farah province. The Afghan government says 140 civilians died, while an Afghan human rights group says about 100 were killed. The U.S., , how- ever, says no more than 30 civilians were killed, and 60 to 65 militants. I Ir 13 Turn to the Exper6 13 S.E.E.R. 2 Ton • $2,190 3 Ton - $2.390 4 Ton - $2,690 5 Ton - $3.090 $I9.99 ''•••• Checkup! 14 S.E.E.R. 2 Ton - $2,690 3 Ton • $2.990 4 Ton • $3,190 5 Ton - 53,690 ,Bottom line price! Don't be tooled by the interior builder's units! "Monthly payments as low as $27.00" nii QUALITY'tu1 In-mu% I.. I I DIABETIC NEUROPATHY? If you suffer from diabetic neuropathy, you may qualify to participate in a new research study seeking to reverse the nerve damage caused by diabetes Qualified participants will receive free evaluation and you may be compensated for time and travel Please call Laszlo J. Mate. M.D. (561)282-0088 [email protected] LUCKY NUMBERS Here are winning state lottery numbers picked last week. • CONNECTICUT__ Sat. Cash a __ 1 -12-31-34 GEORGIA Sat. Wade 5q1:15122-31-36 Bonus 18 ILLINOIS Sat. Lotto 12.22.31.37.40.51 MARYLAND Sat. Muni jt-13.14-15.35-30 MASSACHUSETTS Sat. mega 244-3345.37 NEWJ£RSET Sal Cash 5 7.9.16.17-28 NEWYORK Sat. lotto 33---3-6717-47-48-58 Bonus 21 — Extra 40 - NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND (New Hampshire. Vermont. Maine) Sat Mega 16-27.30-31.38-40 Bonus 4 OHIO Sat. Lotto 3-17-20-22-36-39 WASHINGTON. D.C• Hot lotto 19.20.29.31-35 Hot Ball 13 -FWie Beach IS win room 1 BACK • HIPS • KNEE PAIN? Try the Revolutionary Solution %/=3 440W The anti-shoe. Ks anti anything that doesn't improve) your back and pos'A.r o protect your knees and hips, tone your muscles, or anything else that doesn't positively change your !Infer the bele' TAKE A TEST WALK IN ONE OF OUR MANY NEW SPRING • SUMMER STYLES For Men and Women I CJ authority, Vd=raetin Wellington • 561.333c-e0334 HOURS Pionertindsy ICIAM.SIM • Swot), I0AM•4PM emila --•ilearwar ""REre.r- CERTIFIED PHYSICIAN PinPointe 71717 MME PW NEW Laser Technology For The Treatment of Toenail Fungus IN ONE TREATMENT' Introductory Price Reduction Financing Available EXPIRES 6/35'09 Proven Clinical Results I Painless Without Anesthesia Call For Your FREE Fungal Nail Consultation Dr. John Schilero, D.P.M. Palm Beach Orthopedic Institute Board Certified by American Board of Podiatric Surgery D?ral 561-339.3310 Three Convenient Locations: JUPITER PALM BEACH GARDENS WEST PALM BEACH When you wont to see, be seen, and savor all the best of the Polm Beaches, start your search here. EFTA00259966
Page 70 / 86
• 14A
THE PALM BEACH POST
•
MONDAY. JUNE 15.2009
•
;NOEL L IMIRLIOIN9 AM1XAN I
r --
One giant leap for babykind
CASIRILLL) de MURCIA. Spain — A man representing the devil jumps over
babies Sunday in an act known as El Colacho during the Corpus Christi
festivaL The rite is supposed to protect the children from evil spirits.
Pakistan sends army to hunt Taliban chief
The offensive is in an area where
bin Laden also may be hiding.
71rt Associated Mrs,
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Pakistan or-
dered its army to go after the country's
top Taliban commander, a feared militant
whose remote stronghold could prove a
difficult test for troops but whose demise
would be a major blow to the insurgencies
here and in Afghanistan.
The announcement Sunday of the op-
eration in South Waziristan, rumored for
weeks, came hours after a suspected US.
missile strike killed five alleged militants
there. The move will likely please Wash-
ington, which considers the tribal region
a particularly troublesome hideout for Al-
Qaeda and Taliban fighters implicated in
attacks on US. troops in Afghanistan.
Owais Ghani, the governor of North
West Frontier Province, told reporters in
Islamabad late Sunday that the govern-
ment felt it had no choice but to resort
to force against Pakistani Taliban chief
Baitullah Mehsud and his network Pasi
army action in the region had usually
faltered or ended in truces.
"Baitullah Mehsud is the root cause
of all evils," Ghani said, noting a slew of
suicide bombings that have shaken Paki-
stan in recent days.
South Waziristan. part of Pakistan's
semiautonomous tribal belt, is a rumored
hideout of Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin
Laden.
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• 12A THE PALM BEACH POST • MONDAY. JUNE 15,2009 Caring for burns: Patients' needs Pain management to endure the excruciating healing procedures. ► BUHNSfrom IA trapped in a flaming go- cart May 25 west of Jupiter and suffered major burns. he needed emergency specialized burn care. He became the latest victim evacuated from Palm Beach County to Jackson, the closest burn center 'Certified by the American College of Surgeons. There are 53 such ern- ien in North America, anduding two more in Florida at Shands hospital in Gainesville and the Uni- versity of South Florida in rramPa. • Delray Medical Center And St. Mary's Medical Center in West Palm Beach received funding after the Sept. 11 attacks (•.) treat multiple burn pa- nts in case of another terrorist attack. but the centers are not certi- fied to treat major burns. Any person suffering ierious burns in Palm Beach County should be ;taken to one of those loca- tions. If necessary, staffers there will send the patient to Jackson Memorial. Waiting to whisk burn victims off the copter is Nantias team — which *ill eventually include durse specialists, physical therapists and psycholo- gists "More than any other kind of medicine, treat- ment of burns is a teeth activity," Namias said. '"The doctor alone isn't that important." Namias said the popu- lar perception is correct: Nothing causes more pain than burns. "Pain management is one of the most important things we do," he said. At first, most burn vic- tims are heavily sedated to relieve the initial agony. For the majority, one of the first stops will be the operating room, where dead skin and tissue must be removed. For that, they are anesthetized in what otherwise would be an ex- cruciating procedure. Sometimes other se- Thirty to 35 hors of fluid a day to nourish damaged tissues. Up to 3,500 calories a day to keep up with an increased metabolism. Patients' No Membership Fees! Fitness Kickboxing Fitness Boxing Pilates Belly Dancing Personal Training SUMMER SPECIAL 25% off Personal Training with this ad! 2814 S Dixie El Cid Fitness Studio 561.228.1142 www.elcidfitness.com y 2 blocks south al Belvedere Road Classic Cultured Marble Inc. • VISIT OUR SHOWROOM... Mon-Fri: Sam Spin I skin harvested for grafts Prop° by JONI LAMTIGLA SPECIALIZED CARE: Physical therapist Orlando Sendon treats Burn Center patient Darryl mcietcnie, who suffered major burns to his arm and hand in an industrial accident. Burn victims are susceptible to infection. rious injuries must be treated: broken bones suffered in leaps from flaming houses or injuries incurred in car crashes. The team then goes into a vault where it stockpiles cadaver skin from organ donors. That skin is used to cover wounds, but only temporarily. "Eventually the body will reject skin from any- one else, and we need to harvest skin from the victim in order to do the graft," Namias said. Burn surgeons cannot use skin from other peo- ple for final grafts because they cannot employ the immune system suppres- sion drugs used in other transplants. Namias said. Burn victims are so sus- ceptible to infection that their immune systems cannot be interdicted. While waiting for a graft, the patient must be stabilized, which is extremely tricky. The bodies of burn victims often no longer recognize 98.6 degrees as a normal CAN'T LOSE WEIGHT? GET A SECOND OPINION. Lose 21 pounds in 4 weeks: Rite 55:, -net Mxtve eel to lose ivt4t eta, cif c phryoaa dffen: giver. Ore( tradicol extol car unionize e act based on your untrue reetebolso tiracid, MOdKOfiCIP CM Ow *WO moil less tssues. Fnd at why drusonds coi erring to Ilse Center fee *did Necit lass fcr icit vile, elferkble saingns, (di fir o Ication neor you "the center for medical weight loss 866-14D-LIMN mw• mdbeilin (OM Mal 84L) $19 INITIAL CONSULTATION LIMITED TIME OFFER body temperature and reset their internal ther- mostats to as high as 101.5 degrees. "l'hat means an in- crease in metabolism, which means they need many more calories in or- der to begin to heal," Nam- ias said. "For major burns, we'll give them 3,500 calories per day. If they could eat Whoppers, that would he easy, but many are so sedated, they can't eat, so we put it into them through Ws. and that's a lot of calories to pump into a body that way." Fluids are also an issue. "Your average appendix patient will get about 3 li- ters per day," Namias said. "A major burn patient will need as much as 30 to 35 liters per day." Physical stability isn't the only issue. The psy- chology of burn patients begins with the shock and pain of the fire and pos- sible deformities. "But these incidents are also typically associated with some other tragedy," Namias said. "The house has burned down, and they have no home. "Maybe somebody else was injured or killed. And we have lots of people who worry about the cat. 'No one has seen the cat.' " Burn victims often suf- fer from post-traumatic stress syndrome, he said. I XG E - Currency Dthe. West PaP, Mach '671 sr. Nimwyn Cede. Port St Lode Meanwhile, the graft _ 335-4445 - ing goes on. "We can save people with bums over 90 percent of their bodies," Namias said. "We harvest skin from the victim. and we have machines that expand the skin as much as six times, create a mesh from it, and then it grows in." Some patients need "10 20. 30 operations" for both functional and cosmetic reasons, he said. And there is always the pain. which is managed so that as much as pos- sible patients remain alert, walking and in physical therapy. Dickford Cohn, 64, of Key West was admitted to the Burn Center on May 16 with second-degree burns over almost half 'of his body after a house fire. "I certainly expected a great deal more pain," he said. "The first thing they do • is manage the pain without doping you all up" Cohn said that has made his recovery much quicker. Originally expect- ing three months in the hospital, he believes it will be closer to a month. The Burn Center also gives courses in how to prevent burns. Children removing hot soup from microwaves is a new source of serious injury. Namias said. But the traditional causes still provide him with mast of his cases — smoking in bed, roofers pouring hot tat and espe- cially people frying food. "Homemade french fries," he said, wincing. 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(6) Dodge/Ford/GMC Utility Trucks, (I) Ford Cargo Van, (I) Ford Taurus. (1) GMC Cage Truck, (1) Lot Restaurant EQ. (1) Lot Auto Parts Cleaning EQ (I) Lot Medical/Dental EQ. ( I) Min Bike-Gas. (1) Motorized Go-Ped Rcc Games & Eqpt Many Wooden Pallets saw (All ems will he sold 'AS.I.S,WifiRE.1” -. Retail Merchandise - 1st Come, 1st Served PALM BEACH COUNTY THRIFT STORE 00 3323 Bdredere Road, hiding 507,1*st Paha Balch lZ frers1-95EnafeheierritoalphisiaSii Sine defeldafierGovia) re C:vtr mews re reu stem we try deed in No gammen oe onto era ttPIMIOymi010 Nlswp PM Ira (no retro 0, et MeV*. TM Tx, 90,1 eras CNA nine* otplelva. MS tab. Mar% eels. mated aro Fa •nteresca plum MAIM PoMewei Comet Thu WM el Ulan% MAN to Meal, CP INISM.ftliiConyCoratiscres d Pam Seem Cony Part Neck litemeaml Ante. Pain BRAN Canty snore& osia 800 WSJ Affaity CO/ *Met NO Boca Tom PONDeo Orycncerecn Bock Gee d Ikea Atha Dry el Wes Beat Spa Palm Sprem Her Cee Dec. 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THE PALM BEACH POST • MONDAY. JUNE 15.2009 11.4 NEWSMAKERS C. Albin, renowned chef at Four Seasons, dies at 61 BANKRUPTCY Today's highlights Obama women get royal treatment First lady Michelle Obama, on a visit to London last week. got permission from Queen Elizabeth II for a guided tour of Bucking- ham Palace with her daughters, Sasha and Malia. They were shown around the queen's official residence and its gardens. and the queen herself greeted them af- terward, according to a royal source who spoke on condition of anonymity because the meeting was private. Nails In the coffin: Nine Inch Nails frontman Tfent Reznor said their performance Sunday at the Bonna- roo Music Festival was their last in the country. The group performed in the early morning hours Sunday at the Manchester, Tenn., festival, shortly after Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band wrapped up. "It just dawned on me that this is our last show ever in the United States," Reznor said. "Don't be sad. I'll keep going. But I think I'm going to lose my ... mind if 1 keep doing this, and I have to stop." Moviegoers still hung over: The Warner Bros. com- edy The Hangover hauled in $33.4 million to remain the top box-office draw for a second straight weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday. Disney's latest Pixar Animation hit, the action comedy Up. came in a dose second again with $30.5 million. Debuting at No. 3 with $25 million was The Taking of Pelham 123. — Palm Reath Post war vnirn It c Obama FACING FORECLOSURE? The recent foreclosures you could You A E11141ggnaitiingq.11 MALL -1 iglyting • addition of new judges to in Palm Beach County means lose your home within months! A NO 1 0 NGE e hear that 0 ' D o 0 LM N 0 LI )KN 0 • GiAlUcli N, rz a • "1S 0 to - iif presert,.e hint: 0 the tinernan dream ,_ owner hip" I • • IiNhTI• 0 0 5611—: * : - 2t a 2 www.FLF I reel i sure 0 i ce L.L.M. Red ••••• 12230 Forest.HIll Boulevard Proper!) lb d,;....,:.; %I ...tesat anus Is 4.....?...- oe'l.pl•arh , .4........h.a.o NOTICE DEVELOPMENT OFFICIAL THE BOARD COUNTY, FLORIDA, RESOLUTION A8N/Z-2009470555 Order Abandonment Planning ice -Exception Ord... AmendmenT approving an Palm Beach County to olbw a rezoning the Agoculbrol Ownership (Pp) ritallesiktkeltg: Turnpke (WARR OF LAND IDENTIFIED UNRCORPORATED A HAM HEARING REZONING 9:30 A.M. IN SIXTH FLOOR AVENUE, WEST A COPY OF IS AVAILABLE AT THE PUNNING, LOCATED AT FLORIDA 33411 A.M. AND 5.00 HEARING AND ORDINANCE IF A PERSON BOARD. AGENCY, MATTER CONSIDERED WILL NEED A PURPOSE, HE OF THE PROCEEDINGS THE TESTIMONY TO BE BASED WTTH THE COUNTY UNIFIED IN ACCORDANCE THIS DOCUMENT FORMAT. AUXILIARY UPON REQUEST CONTACT ROBIN Publish: June NO. 4466449 OF PUBLIC HEARING APPLICATION FOR ORDER ABANDONMENT ZONING MAP AMENDMENT OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF PROPOSES TO ADOPT THE FOLLOWING Elks: Resolution approving a als oleclation of Palm Beach County Inc., t Regaigt to legislatively won under X.1989-939 and the granted under R.2006-008. Talc Official Zoning Mop Amendment by JPR Planning Services, Inc., Agent. from the Single-family Residential Residential IAR) Zoning Chalets Zoning District with a Conditional South soil corner of Jog Rood and 116.01MENT PLANT 1110 (1988-00057) IN THE MAP IN THIS ADVERTISEMENT PALM BEACH COUNTY. ON THE RESOLUTION AFFECTING OF THIS LAND WILL BE HELD ON Ma THE JANE M THOMPSON MEMORLAL GOVERNMENTAL CENTER, 301 PAW BEACH, FLORIDA. THE ABOVE REFERENCED PROPOSED FOR INSPECTION IN THE ZONING ZONING AND BUILDING 2300 NORTH JOG ROAD, WEST WEEKDAYS BETWEEN THE HOURS PM. INTERESTED PARTIES MAY APPEAR BE HEARD WITH RESPECT TO THE DECIDES TO APPEAL ANY DECISION OR COMMISSION WITH RESPECT AT SUCH A MEETINQ OR RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS, AND MAY NEED TO INSURE THAT A VERBATIM IS MADE, WHCH RECORD AND EVIDENCE UPON WHICH THE ALL APPEALS MUST BE FILED IN ACCORDANCE APPUCABLE PROVISIONS Of THE LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE. WITH THE PROVISIONS OF MAY BE REQUESTED IN AN AIDS OR SERVICES WILL WITH AT LEAST THREE DAYS NOTICE PARKER AT 561.233.5041. PALM BEACH BY Development by JPR abandon the Development Resolution application of (VIZ to the Pubic Overlay Zone The Florida's FOR THE 29, 2009 AT CHAMBERS, NORTH OLIVE RESOLUTION DIVISION, DEPARTMENT, PALM BEACH, OF 8 00 AT THE PROPOSED MADE BY THE TO ANY HEARING, HE FOR SUCH RECORD INCLUDES APPEAL IS PALM BEACH THE ADA, ALTERNATIVE BE PROVIDED PLEASE — __ z _g-...— .,. ...0 W.T.P.01 I I ..,,„ Le Mt ) .... ... " 14 1:1249ffie II 11.41 42 15. 2009 The Mondial Press NEW YORK — Christian "Hitsch" Albin, who fed the world's luminaries for decades as executive chef of The Four Seasons a restaurant that invented the "power lunch". — has died. He was 61. Mr. Albin died at New York Univer- sity Medical Center on Saturday, five days after being diagnosed with cancer. The Swiss-born chef's hearty laughter filled the ritzy Manhattan restau- rant's kitchen for 36 years. He served guests from Jacqueline Onassis and Elton John to President Clinton, Princess Diana and Martha Stewart. 'He was our hero: the man we always turned to when we knew we had to achieve the impossible," Mr. Albin said a statement released by the 50-year-old restau- rant's managing partners, Julian Niccolini and Alex von Bidder. The "impossible" at times meant wealthy guests "who would ask for everything you can pos- sibly imagine!" Mr. Albin joked recently. "Like, an English muffin with an egg on top, for dinner" He sent a waiter out to buy muffins — and the special request was served alongside fancier fare such as filet of buffalo. A bigger-than-life man, he put in 14-hour days at the restaurant off Park Avenue. With him in the kitchen, The Four Sea- sons won a James Beard Award, equivalent to a culinary Oscar. The Four Seasons is an international publicity ma- chine and, despite its age, still a place to be seen. It even earned landmark status in 1989. • Save Your Home! You Ma). • Stop The Calls! • Eliminate Debt! FREE IMMEDIATE CONSULTATION Low Fees, Easy Payment Plan Attorney Gregg R. Wexler has handled thousands of Bankruptcy cases. MAINO14ICF: Wrsl PAI tit RI MTh II (561) 641-8020 Plantation Shutters OVRTAINIGQIWITATAROIRARIPIICR— Stoats! $ 7 " All About Blinds Some Owner for 16 Yeats in PS County Reputation second to none! 700 Old Dixie Highway Suite 107, Lake Park, Florida 561-844-0019 Times change. Values don't. For over 150 years PNC has operated on a model of strength, stability and a conservative approach to risk. Today, these values are more valuable than ever Through good tones, challenging times and the times that follow both, our approach to business remains quite simple and straightforward: To do what most benefits our customers in the long run. And what helps them most to achieve their goals. This means creating products and services that make navigating your financial journey easier. Case in point: Virtual Wallet'," our innovative suite of online banking products specifically tailored to the next generation of customers. It means building more green buildings than any other company on Earth' It means investing in communities, and the people and businesses that give them their vitality and character. 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4 10A NE PALM BEACH POST • M0NDAY, JUNE 15,2009 4. Circuit's goal: Ensure people not `deer in headlights' ► COURTS/Tom IA That circuit has begun requiring borrowers and lenders to meet before their first court appear- ances, leading to many cases being settled. Meanwhile, Palm Beach County Circuit Court last week launched a pilot pro- gram to help homeowners understand options that could keep them in their houses. But action from Tal- lahassee has been lim- ited, even with nearly 11 percent of mortgages in Florida in foreclosure — the highest rate in the country, according to the Mortgage Bankers As- sociation. Foreclosures in Florida dropped from April to May but were still up 50 percent from the same time last year. according to numbers RealtyTtac released Thursday. During the spring ses- sion that ended last month, state lawmakers intro- duced 15 bills to address foreclosure issues. But 10 bills never received a hear- ing. including several that would have required medi- ation between lenders and borrowers. The Center for Responsible Lending es- timates that one of every three homeowners facing foreclosure in Florida could stay in their homes with mediation. Instead, lawmakers appmved just two foreclo- sure-related bills: one to comply with new mini- mum federal regulations for lenders and another to increase court costs for foreclosure cases from 5300 to as much as $1,900. The state "should have done more." said state Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink, a Democrat running for governor. Sink pointed to the The PALM HOUSE ai ilre AL*. Readt C1 liatheada aim • • Royals • Alexanders • %yenta Roetrelenll • Areas • Coconuts • Queen Palms • Yeitchla Manors • Monklms • Mango Trees • Others Available • 1011 MIS 891).95 561-964-3709 5792 Desoto Road. Lake Worth ProhmodU Deana b InLYIAne Avalabk Supreme Court survey The Florida Supreme Courts Task Force on Residential Mortgage Foreclosure Cases is planning to recommend changes to foreclosure procedures and is asking homeowners to share their experiences with borrowers, mortgage holders and attorneys involved in the process. To complete the court's survey, click here: www.lIcourts.orgigen_publiciacIr/mdex.shtml state Financial Regulation Office's failure to regu- late mortgage lenders, a problem that allowed thousands of people with criminal records into the industry. The office's chief resigned in August after the problems were find reported by The Miami Herald, but a replacement still has not been hired. Attorney General Bill McCollum, a Republican also running for governor, called the foreclosure cri- sis a "very tough issue" that his office has tried to address by cracking down on fraud. But he said options for helping home- owners are limited. "It is not something you can pump money out to avoid foreclosures, he said. "We don't have the re- sources to do that. There is no bailout in the state of Florida." Gov. Charlie Crist noted the rise in foreclosures in his State of the State speeches in 2008 and this year. But he has never included any specific fore- closure-related bills among his legislative priorities. "We want to do all we can to help people," Crist said when asked about the state's responsibility to ad- dress foreclosures. "It's a tough time right now? Crist pushed banks to halt foreclosures during STOP SMOKING $2290 • 1 TREATMENT • NO NEEDLES F • NO MEDICATION • 100% PAINLESS LASER THERAPY 1.866.277.7848 www.laser-therapies.com Law Offices Of RICHARD S. WEINSTEIN, P.A. FORECLOSURE DEFENSE SHORT SALE/MORTAGE MODIFICATION PERSONAL BANKRUPTCY Consultations Ski at Jupiter, Wellington and Boco Raton Mom Oilicir 312 - S Old Duo H•ghony • Soto 206 • Apter, FL 33458 sew RWeanteinloweor • RKhoedORWeinneinlaw corn 800.647.7411 561-969-9369 the holidays last year and ultimately settled on a vol- untary moratorium. Crises press office could not verify whether any banks participated. Crist also named a foreclosure task force in February 2008, includ- ing elected officials and people from the banking and real estate industries But the panel made just one recommendation to the legislature: to increase protect ions for people with subprime loans. Lawmakers did not adopt it. "There is just not an inclination to give the light of day to any of these foreclosure remedies," said Rep. Darren Soto, D- Orlando, whose "Foreclo- sure Bill of Rights" would have delayed payments for many homeowners. McCollum, who created a Mortgage Fraud Task Force in 200Z said home- owners facing foreclosure need to be more proactive with their lenders. "In many cases the lender can and will work this out," he said. Several states, includ- ing Ohio and New Jersey, have implerhented aggres- sive programs to require mediation between bank- ers and lenders. In Florida, two Leon County circuit judges made a proposal in December to the state's 20 chief judges to create simi- lar mediation programs Three of the state's 20 judicial circuits have en- listed the nonprofit Collins Center for Public Policy to offer mediation. The first such program arose in the Treasure Coast's 19th Circuit, where borrowers and lenders are required to meet before their first court appear- ance. In the past month, 22 of the first 31 mediated foreclosure cases in the circuit were settled with renegotiated loans. In Palm Beach County, Chief Circuit Judge Kath- leen Kroll signed an order to require banks to con- sider revising a loan at the homeowner's request. The court receives an average of 500 new foreclosures each week. Last week, the courts in Palm Beach County began a service to make The $295.00 Jewelry Makeover! Your Old Jewelry + Our Talented Jewelers = A Wonderful Custom Piece lust For You! 7•••••••••••Lip••••••• •••••1 pma Van Dell Jewelers - Designers WELLINGTON 13873 Welling Trace • Suite B-1 • 561.793.2661 ROYAL PALM BEACI1 110::1 Southern Blvd. • Suite 120 • 561.784.5220 PALM BEACH GARDEN'. 6231 PGA Blvd. • Suite 114 . 2:414 t'ir n re re rand: Thorn attorneys and law school interns available to walk homeowners through the paperwork. On Thursday, the first day the informa- tion sessions were avail- able, 26 of 142 eligible homeowners attended. "We want to at least have some contact with these people so they're not deer in headlights," said Palm Beach County court general counsel Amy Bor- man. "We want to help? Staff writer Susan Spencer- Wendel and staff researcher Niels Heimeriks contributed to this story. • aele_bendetUpOpost com FORECLOSURE DEFENSE MORTGAGE MODIFICATIONS FREE INITIAL CONSULTATION Many stoats are not aware tale Utay Stlatall teeCOMIC times you nave nary illtrIlltrrIt. A apron Itili Glace of all year rights nay delay the lorectuun ler a par or nom. USE certain eircamstances your bola flaw may be *taigaM aegollete ea es fart maga yie batters reduction to At current lair market Wee of your properly, or a tower loftiest rate atoms; you It :are your home. Call en ler more is NEIL BRYAN TYGAR, P.A. ATTORNEY AT LAW MASTER OF LAWS REAL PROPERTY & LAND DEVELOPMENT FLORIDA. NEW YORK & D.C. BARS (561), 3O5-5214 5341 W ATLANTIC AVE 1301•A DELRAY BEACH. FL 33484 WWW. 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• 8A THE PALM BEACH POST • MONDAY, JUNE 15.2009 U.S. calls move `important step, I" ISRAEL from IA Each will have its own flag. its own national anthem, its own government. Neither will threaten the security or survival of the other" But Netanyahu insisted on Ironclad" guarantees from the United States and the international commu- nity for Palestinian demili- tarization and recognition of Israel's Jewish character. Given those conditions, Netanyahu said. "we will be ready in a future peace agreement to reach a solu- tion where a demilitarized Palestinian state exists alongside the Jewish state." He also said that no new settlements would be created and no more land would be expropriated for expansion but that "nor- mal life" must be allowed to continue in the settle- ments, a term he has used to mean that limited build- ing should be allowed to continue within existing settlements to accommo- i date "natural growth." While this position did not diverge from Netanya- hu's previous statements, he delivered it on Sunday in the context of a speech he had billed as a major foreign policy address, one he had urged Obama to watch. It came 10 days af- ter Obama bluntly rejected "the legitimacy of contin- ued Israeli settlements" in his Cairo address to the Muslim world. The White House reac- tion was positive, if lim- ited, focusing on what it called "the important step forward' of Netanyahu's support for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Pal- estinian conflict. White House press sec- retary Robert Gibbs reiter- ated Obama's commitment to a two-state solution that 'can and must ensure both Israel's security and the fulfillment of the Palestin- ians' legitimate aspira- tions for a viable state." and he said that Obarna 'welcomes Prime Minister Netanyahu's endorsement of that goal: In moving closer to- ward the American and international consensus for a two-state solution, Netanyahu risked alienat- ing right-wing ideologues within his party and his governing coalition. Citing the biblical vi- sion of Isaiah of swords beaten into plowshares, Netanyahu said of the Palestinians, "the do not want to rule over them, to govern their lives, or to impose our flag or our culture on them. But beyond the idea of a state, he seemed to offer little room for compromise or negotiation. He referred repeatedly to the West Rank, the ter- ritory presumed to com- prise the bulk of a future Palestinian state, by its biblical name of Judea and Samaria, declaring it "the land of our forefathers." Netanyahu made no mention of existing frame- works for negotiations, like the US-backed 2003 peace plan known as the road map. He did not address the geographical area a Pales- tinian state might cover, and he said that the Pal- estinian refugee problem must be resolved outside Israel's borders, rejecting the Palestinian demand for a right of return for refugees of the 1948 Arab- Israeli War and their mil- lions of descendants. He insisted that Jeru- salem remain united as the . Israeli capital. The Palestinians demand the eastern part of the city as a future capital. "Benjamin Netanyahu spoke about negotiations, but left us with nothing to negotiate as he system- atically took nearly every permanent status issue off the table: said Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestin- ian negotiator. "Nor did he accept a Palestinian state. Instead, he announced a series of conditions and qualifications that render Aka SCI4Allifint Wound Press Ultra-Orthodox Jews protest after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's speech Sunday at Bar Ban University. a viable, independent and sovereign Palestinian state impossible." Palestinian negotiators have long refused to rec- ognize Israel as a Jewish state, contending that it would prejudge the refu- gees' demand for a right of return and would be detrimental to the status of Israel's Arab minority. Ron Dermer, Netan- yahu's communications director, said that Palestin- ians recognition of Israel as a Jewish state was "not a precondition" for negotia- tions. But, he said, "there will not be an agreement without that recognition." Timed to coincide with the Israeli evening televi- sion news, the speech was rich in Zionist rhetoric and seemed aimed as much at the Israeli public as at the Obama administration. Experts said it was un- likely to cause a political earthquake here, because it largely expressed the prevailing consensus in Israel. "It was a balanced speech that the coalition can live with." said Efraim Inbar, the director of the Begin-Sadat Center. Contrary to the ex- pectations of many he. Netanyahu did not ,riQce the threat of a nuclear Iran a focal point though he described it is one of the greatest challenges face ing Israel, along with the global ecoromic crisis and forging of vace. He caltid on all leaders to meet with hi and discuss peace and Arab cotntries and e r e- preneus to cooper Jr it, advantliVekte. tinian economy and to engage in regional projects with IsraeL Regarding Gaza, when the militant Islamic move ment llamas holds sway, Netanyahu said it is up to the Western-backed p.oefr tinian Authority to (stab. fish the rote Of iaw there and "overcome" the group. 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Attorney seeks to prevent billionaire Epstein from hiding assets abroad Page 1 of 2 PalmBeachPost.com Attorney seeks to prevent billionaire Epstein from hiding assets abroad By SUSAN SPENCER-WENDEI. Palm Beach Post Staff Writer Monday, June 22, 2009 WEST PALM BEACH — An attorney representing one of the passel of young women now suing billionaire Jeffrey Epstein is asking a federal judge to appoint a receiver to take over Epstein's property to prevent him from hiding or transferring assets abroad. Ca PRINTTHIS Bradley Edwards also has asked that the receiver order Epstein post a $15 million bond to ensure money is available if the women prevail in their lawsuits seeking damages because of the sexual contact they say Epstein had with them as minors. Jeffrey Epstein Billionaire financier Jeffrey Epstein has been sentenced to 18 months for felony solicitation of prostitution following accusations by teen girls. Past coverage Post your comments on this story below More local news Latest hreaking news, photos and all of today's Post stories. In a request entered into the court record Friday, Edwards wrote that Epstein, a man of "phenomenal wealth," now faces more than two dozen lawsuits. The woman he represents is seeking more than $50 million in damages. "Accordingly, Epstein has currently pending against him lawsuits seeking more than $1 billion in damages. He thus faces financial ruin," Edwards wrote to U.S. District Judge Kenneth Marra. Edwards cited no direct http://palmbeachpost.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&title=Attorney+seeks+to... 6/23/2009 EFTA00259974
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Attorney seeks to prevent billionaire Epstein from hiding assets abroad Page 2 of 2 City evidence that Epstein is transferring assets abroad. He argued that because On the beat behind the agenda: Post reporters cover your area in City Pulse. Epstein is a sophisticated money manager and is Share This Story allowed out of the Palm Beach County Stockade each day to work at his office, he has the skill, the means and motive to be transferring assets abroad. Epstein is serving an 18-month sentence in the stockade after pleading guilty nearly a year ago to state charges of felony solicitation of prostitution and procuring teenagers for prostitution. Epstein is allowed out of the stockade, though, each day from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m., a spokeswoman for the sheriffs office recently said. The saga began years ago after Town of Palm Beach police investigated reports that young women were being brought to Epstein's manse on El Brillo Way to massage him and have sex with him in exchange for money. Attorneys representing the women have questioned Epstein about his sexual activities with their clients as well as his finances. Epstein has responded by invoking his right to remain silent and not incriminate himself. "The silence in the face of these questions speaks far louder than words," Edwards wrote. "As Justice Brandeis recognized long ago 'Silence is often evidence of the most persuasive character.' "This is plainly one of those situations." An attomey who represented Epstein during the questioning, Robert D. Critton Jr. of West Palm Beach, did not respond to an e-mail seeking comment. On Thursday, Circuit Judge Jeffrey Colbath, will consider whether to unseal a deferred-prosecution agreement Epstein entered with federal prosecutors. Attorneys have said that they seek to unseal that document in part to use it in striking at Epstein's right to remain silent. Find this article at: http /fweumpalmbeachpost.corrt/searchfcontentflocal_newskpapea2009/06/22/0622epstein.html Check the box to include the list of links referenced in the article. http://palmbeachpost.printthis.elickability.corn/pt/ept?action=ept&title=Attomey+seeks+to... 6/23/2009 EFTA00259975
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Jeffrey Epstein i RadarOnline.com Page 2 of 3 S^t, Msp reeds AdVettiXO Got Nev. 31 EXCLUSIVE: Jeffrey Bpstein To Be Released ° "° • " rn° y 601nrs USO. M Fluide etc onM Itards1 nik in wam ca as BI anion Nat and OSS nsin Orall• eging H pang 10 b• MMO from pison aarly. a ~roe FtWarOnne com Eoceen ~30 gully lont yoerlo pronsing een gels tor ponen wring In Idnipla %von te net ang ~a in • Istarn Baadt FicIda ~al VIM revenaltital VMO ~sol. scorly. Ha meed e 8-ncrah wen* and wat *Wed P Da ncw:argon ars te end cl ranker. Bul not was n sant te nl CO« bØlo rong OPin Maa. Eplasin nes Non SICMY ~as ne kairewn • Kwal Paai Warra He had inde kroot* of Ise ida ~usa re was n Cd M banbl. kaing $67 stoa Tra soiree stro ira aa bad n re ~Min of touw mannen al eet 5~74 Mongage Invesbnent Faxt ananas., ere Epsesin Na person *ton Santen.] tob as VS, ■ 1. Wanne. EpnisYS Me beng ben Nam baan ØØ - n WI bas ØM ~ral won Pandt NI otium', cake Halm; sup~16 waag en a Marty vet" aM th• ~os san Mv,M fl es bsly MØ ne le SIM ~a ~ra. Q'S 10/08 says ~Nis been gulst*, by men n af we) ~Ooms ~Innam, sub are pang Sallas hm~ Ms ~d ney teer peCk Eanin Oan• IS Si ns Inas n Ine TAGS Ptt» hl> IV Uren Cat." J ps fr* Mto, Est/ it km". ~ten http://www.radaronline.com/categoiy/tags/jeffrey-epstein 6/19/2009 EFTA00259976
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Jeffrey Epstein I RadarOnline.com Page I of 3 Nodor online com HOME POP CULTURE PHOTOS VIDEOS GIVEAWAYS BEAUTY STYLE cciat4 I >earce AT&T U-verse TV LAIR Included en select plans '5092 %EARN MORE • ittNIAMPWCI•SterMICilaf ..•00 atat HOT PHOTOS GALLERY Today's Hottest Photos GOT NEWS FOR US? Ensue aupsafer...vociLIV Chen a cM ( ) ON• RADAR MST-x727) Eng MM. sy Ot rir http://www.radaronline.com/category/tags/jeffrey-epstein 6/19/2009 EFTA00259977