The Anatomy of Public Corruption

Showing posts with label Big Fraud. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Fraud. Show all posts

Keepers of the Secrets of the Dead Witnesses

Murdered Witnesses

There is a secret cadre of dead witnesses, public officials, police officers and litigants. ADA Mary Knox super proud of career convientley leaves out the unsolved cases of Contra Costa County.  Like everyone else they sued the county and won a settlement.  

Sadly others that sue end up dead. 

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Speaker of House is rich and Pete Bennett litigant has endured murders of his family, counsel, friends woven into the destruction of his businesses so consitents the FBI is likely taking complaints filed by Bennett to a Federal Grand Jury

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Edward Gilligan, the president of American Express

Deaths in Banking

 
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Edward Gilligan, the president of American Express and heir apparent to the company’s chief executive, Kenneth Chenault, died on Friday after falling ill during a flight to New York. He was 55. The cause was believed to be a heart attack, a company spokesman said. Mr. Gilligan was aboard a corporate jet with several colleagues returning from a business trip to Tokyo.

Edward P. Gilligan, American Express Executive, Dies at 55

Edward GilliganCreditMonica Schipper/Getty Images


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Edward GilliganCreditCreditMonica Schipper/Getty Images
Edward Gilligan, the president of American Express and heir apparent to the company’s chief executive, Kenneth Chenault, died on Friday after falling ill during a flight to New York. He was 55.
The cause was believed to be a heart attack, a company spokesman said. Mr. Gilligan was aboard a corporate jet with several colleagues returning from a business trip to Tokyo. CPR was performed during the flight, which was diverted to Green Bay, Wis., the spokesman said. Mr. Gilligan was pronounced dead at a hospital in the area.
Mr. Gilligan was appointed president of American Express, the world’s largest issuer of credit cards, in 2013, establishing him as the likely future chief executive. He oversaw the company’s small business, merchant, global consumer, network, merchant, risk and banking groups.
He started at American Express 35 years ago as an intern while earning an undergraduate degree in economics and management from New York University. He rose steadily through the company’s ranks, becoming vice president for business travel and later senior vice president for commercial card and business travel for the Eastern United States.


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In 2002 he moved to London, where he headed the company’s international consumer card division. He returned to the United States in 2009 and led efforts to integrate American Express into social media, helping to embed the company’s offerings on Facebook as well as through tech companies like Uber.
“Ed loved to talk tech; he loved to talk sports; he was a great storyteller,” said Michael O’Neill, American Express’s executive vice president for corporate affairs. “He was the guy at dinner you wanted to be seated next to.”
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Mr. Gilligan’s death comes during a challenging period for American Express. In February, the company and the big-box retailer Costco announced that they were unable to agree on terms to extend a 16-year relationship in which American Express was the only card Costco accepted. Mr. Chenault said at the time that the news would affect one-tenth of all American Express cards, describing it as a financial blow that would hurt the company’s results for two years.
That same month, a Federal District Court judge in Brooklyn ruled that American Express had violated antitrust law by prohibiting retailers from directing consumers to lower-cost cards. The judge, Nicholas Garaufis, ruled that the company’s actions “imposed actual, concrete harms on competition.” The company said it would appeal.
American Express’s statement on Friday did not say how Mr. Gilligan’s death would affect succession plans at the company.

Source: NYT Ed Gilligan


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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff, v. CHRISTOPHER BUTLER, Defendant.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff, v. CHRISTOPHER BUTLER, Defendant.

PPP

 
  From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research
United States v. Butler
Opinion
No.:CR11 0529 SBA

09-14-2012

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff, v. CHRISTOPHER BUTLER, Defendant.

WILLIAM E. GAGEN, JR. CSB #043832 AMANDA I. BEVINS, CSB#167938 Gagen, McCoy, McMahon, Koss, Markowitz & Raines Attorneys for Defendant CHRISTOPHER BUTLER

SANDRA BROWN ARMSTRONG

WILLIAM E. GAGEN, JR. CSB #043832
AMANDA I. BEVINS, CSB#167938
Gagen, McCoy, McMahon, Koss, Markowitz & Raines
Attorneys for Defendant
CHRISTOPHER BUTLER
APPLICATION AND [PROPOSED]
ORDER TO FILE UNDER SEAL

Sentencing Date: September 21, 2012

UNDER SEAL
Christopher Butler, by and through his counsel William E. Gagen, Jr., hereby moves this Court for an order sealing the application for sealing order, the sealing order, Defendant's Sentencing Memorandum, and all documents related to the Sentencing Memorandum in the above-referenced action. The Sentencing Memorandum relates to an ongoing investigation and the named defendant is in the Dublin Federal Detention Facility. Accordingly, disclosure of these documents may jeopardize Defendant's safety

This application is made on grounds that sentencing documents contain constitutionally-protected information. The individual's right to privacy in such information overrides the public's qualified right of access.

Assistant United States Attorney Hartley West has been contacted and she too has petitioned the Court for an Order to file under seal the Government's Sentencing  Memorandum.

GAGEN, MCCOY, MCMAHON, KOSS,
MARKOWITZ & RAINES
A Professional Corporation
By: _______________
WILLIAM E. GAGEN, JR.
Attorneys for Defendant
CHRISTOPHER BUTLER
ORDER
Upon motion of the Defendant and good cause shown, it is hereby ORDERED that the application for a sealing order, the sealing order, Defendant's Sentencing Memorandum, and all documents related to the Sentencing Memorandum in the above-referenced action, shall be filed under seal by the Clerk until further order of the Court.

_______________
SANDRA BROWN ARMSTRONG
Judge, United States District Court

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The Point of Sale System

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RACIAL JUSTICE Investigative Reporting Program

UC Berkeley INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING

RACIAL JUSTICE Investigative Reporting Program

The Driscoll Story

This Central Valley police chief forced an officer to remodel his home; now he’s California’s latest criminal cop

J-School /IRP students Katey Rusch and Laurence Du Sault report on one case that underscores how officers’ questionable pasts get overlooked or never revealed.

How did this California police department hire so many officers with troubling pasts?

The MacFarland Police Department in California knew that many of its officers had dubious backgrounds. But as J-School/IRP students Katey Rusch and Laurence Du Sault report, the department hired them anyway.

California’s Criminal Cops: Who they are, what they did, why some are still working

A statewide investigation that involved J-School students and alum found that more than 80 law enforcement officers working today in California are convicted criminals


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The Lauren Powell Jobs Story and ComputerLand Stores

A Founders Story about the The Rise Fund 

From the perspective of Pete Bennett legal cases, mergers & acquisitions and the near economic collapse of Apple connects to the ComputerLand fraud case. 

Bennett knows it was his reports that triggered the restatement of earnings in 1995 causing my peers to loose their entire retirement when Merisel Fab restated earnings.  

Most of the MRA refunds went back to Apple.  Stock that was never shipped.   

Lauren Powell Jobs 

  • Bono 
  • Jeff Skoll 
  • Jim Coulter 
  • Lynne Benioff 
  • David Bonderman 
  • Richard Branson 
  • Mellody Hobson 
  • Reid Hoffman 
  • Mo Ibrahim 
  • Laurene Powell Jobs
  •  Anand Mahindra 
  • Pierre Omidyar 
  • Paul Polman

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The Rape of the Redwoods riding the Southern Pacific Depot Murders

The Rape of the Redwoods 

follow the money into  the Redwoods from the corporate Raiders over at computerland who sold their properties and then later the employees lost their retirement when the public company found out they had been taken advantage of.

 when selling a private company controlling the databases and the records of shipments returns to and fro then later the public company discovers they're missing 25 million that went back to Apple.

We saved Apple at the expense of the piers at computer land that lost their retirements when the fraud was discovered by Yours Truly Pete Bennett.

Milken money and Ellison swim in the same pond his Empire partly stored in Walnut Creek California do the same people that baptize my ex-wife are the same people that blew my truck up in 2004 holyshit do you think they tried to kill me after I may have figured out they murdered my grandfather and the grandfather of my sons on the mother side.

It should be no surprise that I was involved in the matter of Keithley versus Homestore.

 it should be no surprise that I was also involved in the Oracle vs PeopleSoft contracted to Vector capital in San Francisco

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A BONO NONO Connecting Elevation Partners to Alston-Bird to TREN Technologies to MOVE, Inc and the attempted murder(s) on Pete Bennett

Connecting Elevation Partners to Alston-Bird to TREN Technologies to MOVE, Inc to attempts of the life of Pete Bennett

On or About June 2008, attorneys from Alston Birds offices in Charlotte South Carolina with the words "Do you remember the proposal you wrote for Kevin Keithley", yeah he never paid and flaked out. 
On March 22, 2005, as its first major venture Elevation attempted to purchase Eidos Interactive.[3] However, its bid failed and the video games giant was sold to rival SCi Entertainment.[4] On November 3, 2005, Elevation invested $300 million to create an alliance between video game developers BioWare and Pandemic Studios, making it one of the biggest independent developers in the world. It also invested $100 million in Move, Inc., which operates real estate information services.


FORBES and 
In August 2006, Elevation announced that it had made an investment in Forbes Media, the parent company of Forbes magazine and Forbes.com.[5] Sources stated that the deal gave Elevation a stake of more than 40 percent at a cost of $250 million to $300 million.[6][7] After Elevation invested in Forbes, the employee pension plan was frozen.[8] In the years that followed, there were numerous rounds of layoffs worldwide.[9] The Forbes family also sold its iconic building on Manhattan's 5th Avenue to New York University.[10]

My story is about witness murders, private equity, mergers and acquisitions linked back to the Matter of Bennett v. Southern Pacific lost in 1989.  It was a winnable case as long the witnesses testified.  
xxxx2

Charlotte


Bank of America Plaza 101 South Tryon Street Suite 4000
Charlotte, NC 28280-4000
United States of America
P: 704.444.1000
F: 704.444.1111


#128 Philip Anschutz

REAL TIME NET WORTH
$11B
as of 3/28/19
  • Over five decades Philip Anschutz has built fortunes in oil, railroads, telecom, real estate and entertainment.
  • He owns the NHL's Kings and a third of the Lakers, plus the building they play in, the Staples Center.
  • His Anschutz Entertainment Group operates more than 100 arenas and concert venues worldwide.
  • On 300,000 acres he owns in Wyoming, Anschutz aims to build the world's biggest wind farm.
  • Has given $2 billion to charity, including $300 million to the University of Colorado's Anschutz Medical Campus.

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Applications For H-1B Visa Comparable To The Size Of Marin County, California, Population





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Infosys employees during a lunch break in Bangalore, India. Indian nationals are the highest recipients of the often maligned H-1B visa. U.S. companies complain that the U.S. has a massive shortfall in STEM graduates and young experts who can fill employment holes. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi, File)
When President Donald Trump says he wants higher skilled workers to immigrate to the United States, he is basically talking about one visa: the H-1B. It’s as loved as it is despised, and its applicant pool in 2018 totaled around 200,000 applications filed by companies looking for foreign workers. To put that into perspective, Salt Lake City has 200,544 inhabitants, and Marin County, one of the richest counties in the Bay Area, has 260,955 inhabitants.
“U.S. employers told us that they are looking to hire more foreigners this year because they cannot find what they are looking for in the local market,” says Richard Burke, CEO of Envoy Global, a global immigration services provider founded in 1998 when the H-1B was bringing in around 150,000 foreign workers in science, technology, engineering and math-related fields (STEM). Their Immigration Trends 2019 report was released on Tuesday. “Trump says he wants more skilled labor coming to the U.S., but there will be no immigration deal with Congress. It all gets swallowed up by illegal immigration,” he says.

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Former President Bill Clinton greatly increased the number of H-1B visas, but increases were phased out and haven’t gone up since. Credit: Mark Reinstein /MediaPunch /IPX
The H-1B has been the source of disdain for many years. Older, American-born tech workers say they have been displaced by foreigners, or have had their workloads outsourced to the main recipients of the visa—the Indian IT firms led by Infosys, Tata Consulting Services, Wipro and Cognizant, which is New Jersey-based but maintains a sizable talent pool in India.
Many of the complaints come from American tech workers of a certain age, usually over 40, who are replaced by younger, cheaper employees. These foreign nationals are often required to work overtime without extra pay, making them exciting to U.S. companies who are not responsible for their pay, and making them a nice bonus to a company’s balance sheet.
Infosys H-1B recipients that have worked for U.S. companies like CVS have filed claims against the Indian company for forced overtime. These are the things that have given the visa a bad name.
H-1B issues used to be greater in number. They collapsed in the Bill Clinton presidency because the legislation at the time was only for a temporary increase. Today there are 65,000 H-1B visas issued to recent foreign graduates from STEM programs in the U.S. Most of them are Chinese and Indian nationals. Then there are 20,000 more visas issued to foreign nationals with advanced degrees. Most of them are Indian nationals.
According to data from the 2017 World Economic Forum, China produces nearly 5 million STEM graduates, India churns out 2.6 million and the U.S. around 568,000, of which well over half are foreign nationals from .... China and India.
“I have two sons. Sadly, none of them are STEM students,” says Burke. “The growth in STEM fields is growing as technology becomes more pervasive throughout society, and we clearly do not have the head count to fill those jobs with local talent.”
Few American students pursue expertise in STEM fields. According to the Obama administration at the time, the U.S. had an inadequate pipeline of teachers skilled in those subjects as recently as 2015.
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Changes to legal immigration under specialty visas like the EB-5 real estate investor visa and the H-1B will be tied to law changes surrounding illegal migration, especially at the border. Trump will likely have to act alone. One issue that matters to U.S. firms looking to hire abroad is keeping work permits for spouses of foreign hires. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
The Immigration A-List
Changes to immigration laws have been bogged down in overly charged emotional arguments related to poor migrants crossing illegally into the U.S. That means legal immigration fixes become temporary, dependent on executive orders signed by the president. Executive Orders can be upended as soon as the Executive Branch leadership changes, making for inconsistent immigration law.
So far there have been two administrative changes to the H-1B visa rule. One change allows for companies to apply for visas on an abbreviated application. If their application is chosen in the lottery system, which is how H-1Bs are chosen, then companies fill out the traditional, complete application at that time instead of pre-lottery. This makes it cheaper and less time-consuming for companies to throw their names in a hat and hope for the best. The second change gives foreign masters degree students a shot at the visa. It used to be overweighted to international undergraduates. These changes go into effect next year.
The third change being discussed now is for the married H-1B recipient from abroad to get a workers permit—or H4 visa—for their spouse. Trump has publicly stated that he wants to undo the Obama-era H4 visa, a negative for the international H-1B workers who tend to be between the ages of 30 and 35 years old.
Immigrant advocates like to point out that foreign-born talent accounts for one in every 3.5 inventions in the U.S., a dramatic growth from the 1970s, when foreigners contributed one in 12 patents. That doesn’t mean any of them were on an H-1B visa.
Canada has seen a similar surge.
According to Envoy Global’s survey, the quest for foreign talent has not slowed. Eighty percent of the roughly 400 employers surveyed said they expect their foreign national head count to either increase or stay the same in 2019.
Forty-seven percent of employers said the visa application process has become more difficult, while only 18% said it had become less difficult. That is the largest margin between the two responses since Envoy started asking the question three years ago. Most of this is due to the Trump Administration responding to legal claims against Indian IT firms that have led to requests for more evidence-of-need by the U.S. firm looking to hire a non-U.S. worker.
According to the American Immigration Lawyers Association, the average case processing time has increased by 91% since 2014. In turn, employee anxiety has also increased and the potentially delayed employee start dates makes it harder for hiring managers to plan.
Another key takeaway from the Envoy survey is that 66% of new hires get their “green card” so they can stay longer than the visa’s maximum six years allowance. Foreigners who get a green card are forced into contractual obligations and can be fined for leaving the company that sponsors them.
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Tech workers hold signs as they protest Trump administration policies in San Francisco on February 13, 2017. In the wake of the 2016 election, old-school, anti-capitalist activists and new-school, free-enterprise techies in the city are pushing aside their differences to take on a common foe. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)
Tech vs. Trump
When Trump won the election, tech companies immediately began protesting his immigration policies. While his policies were focused on illegal border crossers, a labor pool that is of little interest to tech companies, Silicon Valley quickly joined the chorus of anti-Trump activists calling for greater leniency in a country where leniency is already the order of the day.
But what Silicon Valley types were really worried about was the end of the H-1B. For human resources management and the C-suite, that meant they would have to reconsider where to do research and development, among other things.
“Toronto, Waterloo and Kitchener have created more tech jobs than San Francisco, Seattle and Boston combined,” says Burke, citing Canadian immigration data and data from CBRE Group. “If governments make it difficult for you to grow your engineering talent pool, companies will relocate,” he says.
Since Trump’s election, an increasing number of H-1B visas have gone to U.S. companies like Amazon and Deloitte instead of the long-dominant Indian IT firms.
Lastly, here’s another warning many people in Washington may not be fully tuned into yet: Beijing’s planned Greater Bay Area, a tri-city area in the warm south that includes English-speaking, high-culture, low-crime cities like Hong Kong, is aiming to be bigger and badder than Silicon Valley. What’s stopping companies there from hiring Taiwanese, Koreans and maybe even a few Americans to help them build better 5G, better holograms, better artificial intelligence and supercomputers than Americans? The Trump administration says it is worried about China beating the U.S. on key technological developments. He also says he wants more A-list immigration. That bodes well for the H-1B program. But serious changes to the program will require an act of Congress, and all of those acts will be tied to illegal immigration issues, issues where Trump and the opposition are light years apart.

For media or event bookings related to Brazil, Russia, India or China, contact Forbes directly or find me on Twitter at @BRICBreaker


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