Thursday, June 30, 2011

AP Exclusive: Fuzzy math in health law formula (AP)

WASHINGTON – Older adults of the same age and income with similar medical histories would pay sharply different amounts for private health insurance due to what appears to be an unintended consequence of the new health care law.

Aware of the problem, the administration says it is exploring options to address a potential disparity that could mean added controversy for President Barack Obama's health care overhaul. The law expands coverage to more than 30 million uninsured people and would require most Americans to carry insurance.

The glitch mainly affects older adults who are too young for a Medicare card but have reached 62, when people can qualify for early retirement from Social Security. Sixty-two is the most common age at which Americans start taking Social Security, although their monthly benefit is reduced.

As the health care law is now written, those who take early retirement would get a significant break on health insurance premiums. That's because part or all of their Social Security benefits would not count as income in figuring out whether they can get federal subsidies to help pay for coverage until they become eligible for Medicare at 65.

"There is an equity issue here," said Robert Laszewski, a former health insurance executive turned policy consultant. "If you get a job for 40 hours a week, you're going to pay more for your health insurance than if you don't get a job."

The Obama administration says it is working on the problem.

"We are monitoring this issue and exploring options that would take into account the needs of Social Security beneficiaries, many of whom are disabled or individuals of limited means," Emily McMahon, a top Treasury Department policy official, said in a statement to The Associated Press.

Other officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because the issue is politically sensitive, said the administration is concerned because the situation could create a perception that some people are getting a worse deal compared with their less-industrious peers.

McMahon doubted that what amounts to a hefty health care discount would start a stampede toward early retirement at a time when many experts are urging older Americans to stay on the job longer. Only a "limited number of individuals" would decide they're better off not working, she said.

To see how the Social Security wrinkle would work, consider a hypothetical example of two neighbors on the same block.

They are both 62 and have the same income of $39,500 a year. But one gets all his income from working, while the other gets $20,000 from part-time work and $19,500 from Social Security.

Neither of them gets health insurance on the job. Instead, they purchase it individually.

Starting in 2014, they would get their coverage through a new online health insurance market called an exchange. Millions of people in the exchanges would get federal tax credits to make their premiums more affordable. Less-healthy consumers could not be charged more because of their medical problems.

The neighbor who is getting Social Security would pay an estimated $206 a month in premiums.

Half of his income from Social Security, or $9,750, would not be counted in figuring his federal health insurance tax credit. On paper, he would look poorer. So he would get a bigger tax credit to offset his premiums.

But the neighbor who makes all his income from work would not be able to deduct any of it. He would pay $313 for health insurance, or about 50 percent more.

The estimates were produced using an online calculator from the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation.

The disparities appear to be even greater for married couples and families in which at least one member is getting Social Security. With a bigger household, both the cost of coverage and the federal subsidies involved are considerably larger.

The glitch seems to be the result of an effort by Congress to make things simpler. Lawmakers decided to use the definition of income in the tax code, which protects Social Security benefits from taxation.

"The practical effect is if more of your income is in the form of Social Security benefits, you are going to be eligible for bigger tax credits in the exchange," said Chapin White, a senior researcher at the nonpartisan Center for Studying Health System Change.

It's unclear whether the Obama administration can fix the problem with a regulation, or whether it will have to go back to Congress. In case of the latter, it will have to deal with Republicans eager to repeal the health care law.

The decision to use the tax code's definition of income for the health care law has created other problems.

Medicare's top number-cruncher is warning that up to 3 million middle-class people in households that get at least part of their income from Social Security could suddenly become eligible for nearly free coverage through Medicaid, the federal-state safety net program for the poor. Chief Actuary Richard Fosters says that situation "just doesn't make sense."

___

Online:

Kaiser Health Reform Subsidy Calculator: http://tinyurl.com/ydopqx7

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Live Blog: Kinect Games, Halo 4 Will Likely Lead Microsoft's E3 Push

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Live Blog: Kinect Games, Halo 4 Will Likely Lead Microsoft’s E3 Push

Live blog starts at 9:30 a.m. Pacific, 12:30 p.m Eastern. Refresh this post for the latest updates.

LOS ANGELES — Microsoft will likely unveil new games for its Kinect motion controller during its E3 press conference Monday, and we’ll also go deeper with Gears of War 3, the company’s big shooter scheduled for release later this year.

What else will the maker of Xbox 360 show the world?

Probably Halo 4, Kinect Star Wars, Dance Central 2 and Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary, if an early morning update on the Xbox.com website is to be believed. Those game titles appeared on the site briefly Monday in an apparent publishing error, according to Kotaku.com.

We’ll know for sure at 9:30 a.m. Pacific, when Microsoft’s E3 presser begins. Check back here for Wired.com’s live coverage.

9:27 — We are here! The briefing is scheduled to start in just a few minutes. There’s a “content warning” on the big screens here at the Galen Center; we are warned that the videos will about to see contain images of intense violence. Awesome.

9:30 — The music has changed. That means it is starting, I think. “Everything is so green,” Jason says sitting next to me. Jason has never been to an E3 before apparently. He missed the Cirque du Soleil thing where we were all in light-up ponchos.

9:31 — Things kick off with a video of Modern Warfare 3. Oh no, it’s actuajly a live demo. Somebody is on stage playing it. AHAHAHAH the controller got unsynced and it paused. Don’t laugh, it’s happened to you. Just not in the first two seconds of a Microsoft press conference. Unless you’re Peter Moore.

9:33 — The army men are swimming through water. Then they reach a checkpoint. “Checkpoint reached,” it says.

9:34 — They are swimming after a submarine. They plant something on it. They leave! They see the ruined Manhattan skyline. They’ve been in the Hudson River or something all this time. Gross. That’s never gonna wash off.

9:36 — Now the submarine is above the water and they are infiltrating it, shooting the other men. Pow pow pow! go their guns. The demo skips ahead to a new section, and water is filling the submarine. They find more men! They shoot them, too.

9:37 — The army men jump in a big inflatable pool toy raft and go zipping down the river, shooting with wild abandon. Navy ships and things are all over the place. Everything is either on fire now or was in the recent past. They steer the pool toy into a helicopter and it takes off. Majestic war music plays. The end!

9:41 — Reps of Infinity Ward and Sledgehammer intro the game, and then Xbox’s Don Mattrick takes the stage to welcome us. On behalf of Microsoft, he’s like to thank the fans for making last year the biggest year in Xbox history.

9:43 — Crystal Dynamics takes the stage to show us a demo of Tomb Raider.

9:45 — This is the same demo that has been described in Game Informer, Official PlayStation Magazine, etc. Wired.com will have our impressions of the Tomb Raider demo during E3 week. For now, the audience is watching as a young Lara Croft slowly moves her way through a scary-ass cavern, trying not to die.

9:50 — The Tomb Raider demo comes to a close with Lara making a daring escape out of the tunnels of hell. She sees a sweet-ass pirate ship on the horizon as the demo ends.

9:51 — Tomb Raider will be released in fall 2012, so don’t hold your breath. Now, EA Sports president Peter Moore takes the stage to show us four EA Sports games that will feature Kinect support in 2012. People applaud. They must not be live-blogging this. Madden, Tiger Woods, Fifa will all have Kinect support.

9:52 — Moore turns it over to BioWare’s Ray Muzyka, who will talk about Mass Effect, and apparently how it will be integrated with Kinect? That seems to be the implication. Yes: It will support Kinect for voice recognition, he says. You’ll be able to converse with characters in the game just by using your voice. “It’s unlike anything else out there,” he says. Let’s find out…

9:53 — Wow. Apparently instead of selecting dialogue options, you actually just say the line that’s on screen, and that’ll select the dialogue option. You can also use voice control to tell your combat buddies what to do in battle.

9:55 — We’ll see even more at the EA press briefing later today, he says. And now it’s time to look at Ubisoft’s shooter, Ghost Recon: Future Soldier.

Chris Kohler is the founder and editor of Wired.com's Game|Life, and the author of Power-Up: How Japanese Video Games Gave the World an Extra Life. He will talk your ear off about Japanese curry rice.
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WWDC 2011 Highlights: Apple's Mobile, PC Worlds Converge in iCloud

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WWDC 2011 Highlights: Apple’s Mobile, PC Worlds Converge in iCloud

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wwdc_keynote01

Apple on Monday unleashed a flurry of software news related to its Mac and iOS operating systems during its annual developers conference.

Most significant was the unveiling of iCloud, Apple?s solution to synchronize content such as photos, music and documents across multiple Apple devices.

iCloud is Apple?s big push into online storage and data synchronization, after its previously failed attempt with MobileMe. Apple?s Steve Jobs said the company was killing MobileMe, which cost $100 per year, and replacing it with iCloud, a free service for all Apple customers. iCloud will debut with the release of the iOS 5 operating system, due out fall.

Apple also previewed new features in its upcoming Mac operating system, OS X Lion, which is looking more and more like iOS. Click through the photos above to see highlights from Monday?s keynote.

Photos: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

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All photos: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

Brian is a Wired.com technology reporter focusing on Apple and Microsoft. He recently wrote a book about the always-connected mobile future called Always On (publishing June 7, 2011 by Da Capo).
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Cambridge Engineers Endeavour to Win Aussie Solar Race

Of all the challenges that come with racing across Australia in a solar car, Alisdair McClymont is most worried about bugs. Not the kind you find in software. The kind you find on the ground.

Australia is full of them, often big and occasionally poisonous. This is not something to be taken lightly if you’re a stranger to the outback, as McClymont and his mates on the Cambridge University Eco Racing team are, so you can see why it might be a concern.

“Being from the U.K., we’re not used to bugs and spiders. Or all the heat,” he says. “The environment is not something we’re used to.”

If watching out for spiders is the worst of the things they’ll face competing in the World Solar Challenge in October, they’ll be fine. The biennial 1,800-mile sprint through the outback is the oldest and most prestigious race of its kind, a test of engineering and endurance that draws dozens of teams from around the world. The Cambridge crew is wrapping up work on Endeavour, version 2.0 of the car that placed 14th in 2009 after being sidelined by a bad battery.

“We had quite a good car, but it wasn’t reliable enough,” McClymont says. “We’ve made a lot of modifications to ensure it is reliable. Our goal is to finish as highly as possible.”

Endeavour in the outback during the 2009 World Solar Challenge.

The team will face intense competition, and the race long been dominated by the defending champions from Tokai University in Japan and the Nuon Solar Team of Delft University, the Dutch team that won the four previous races. The University of Michigan is another powerhouse, having spent more than $1 million on its latest car in a bid to bring the United States its first world title since 1987.

Cambridge University Eco Racing was founded in 2007 by veterans of MIT’s solar-racing team. Its first car, Infinity, drove the length of Britain in a goodwill tour to raise awareness of the esoteric sport of solar racing. That was fun and all, but the goal from the start was to compete in the World Solar Challenge.

To that end, the team set to work on Endeavour, a carbon-fiber sliver of a car with an aluminum frame, lithium-polymer battery and state-of-the-art motor. It was impressive, especially for a first attempt, and McClymont believes it would have done better than 14th if the battery hadn’t started blowing cells.

Rather than start from scratch for this year’s race, the team opted to improve Endeavour. It started by replacing the 5-kilowatt-hour lithium-polymer battery pack with a 4-kilowatt-hour lithium–iron phospate unit. It’s heavier, but cheaper and more robust.

“The battery won’t be a problem this year,” McClymont says.

Using the same car means the team can’t change the layout of the wheels, which are something of an anomaly. Almost everyone runs three wheels because they offer less rolling resistance than four. But most cars have two at the front and one at the rear. The Cambridge team built its car the other way around.

“We thought we could make it more aerodynamically efficient having one wheel at the front,” McClymont says. “We’re not convinced that was the right decision to make. But we don’t think it will make that big a difference.”

The team designed the body using computational fluid dynamics to make the car as slick as possible. The car has a drag coefficient of 0.17, which makes it more aerodynamic than any production car but not quite as slippery as the competition. Top-tier solar racers are in the hyperefficient 0.07-to-0.1 range. Endeavour’s problem isn’t the shape, it’s the surface. The team did all the work by hand, so it’s a bit rough.

“The surface isn’t as smooth as we’d like it,” McClymont says. “Carbon fiber is tricky to work with.”

Still, the team is confident it can improve the drag coefficient by refining the wheel fairings and modifying the canopy.

The car is not quite 6 feet wide and almost 16 feet long. It is covered with 64.5 square feet of silicon solar cells that generate as much as 1.3 kilowatts, although 1 kilowatt is more typical. That’s enough to keep the car cruising at 43 mph all day long. The battery is there to provide extra oomph as needed.

“The amount of power you get from the sun changes quite dramatically throughout the day,” McClymont says. “You’re getting much less power at the beginning of the day and the end of the day, so you need a buffer. That buffer is the battery.”

Endeavour, on the road Down Under in 2009. The team is running essentially the same car in this year's race but has changed the battery and made small modifications to the bodywork.

Typically, teams will start the day with a fully charged battery and end with a depleted one.

“The ideal strategy is to drive all day at constant speed and end up with no battery left,” McClymont says.

The cells and pack send power to a CSIRO hub motor that drives the front wheel. The motor is 98 percent efficient and generates 1.8 kilowatts, or 2.4 horsepower. McClymont says the car, which weighs 485 pounds without the driver, has a top speed of about 75 mph.

Many people roll their eyes at solar-car racing, but the admittedly arcane endeavor has real-world applications. Solar cars are nothing more than highly efficient electric vehicles. The technology involved, from the batteries to the motors to the electronics controlling it all, has direct applications in the automotive sector. That’s why everyone from Ford Motor Co. to Intel works closely with the teams.

“All of these technologies inform the development of electric vehicles and contribute to a more sustainable future,” says Mark Green, technical marketing engineer at Intel, which sponsors the Cambridge University Eco Racing team. Intel provided the computing power needed to run the computational fluid dynamics and other simulations to design the car, and there are Intel Atom processors in the car’s on-board electronics. The interior of a solar car can reach 130 degrees or more, and the cars vibrate like mad because they’ve got minimal suspension, so solar racing is a good test of Intel’s technology, Green says.

Doing well in a solar race demands more than getting in and mashing the accelerator. It’s a marathon, not a sprint, and the defending champs finished the 2009 race in 29 hours, 49 minutes at an average speed of 63 mph. There is a tremendous amount of strategy involved, as teams manage their energy and keep an eye on the weather.

It’s also a grueling test of the endurance of the drivers. Each team has at least two drivers who pull four-hour stints. Although vents provide a modicum of cooling air through the vehicle and everyone carries plenty of water, it’s still a tough job.

“You know you’re going to be knackered by the end of the day, but that’s just the price you pay,” McClymont says.

Photos: Cambridge University Eco Racing

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Colbert looks for answers on campaign finance (AP)

WASHINGTON – Stephen Colbert delights in lampooning politicians on his Comedy Central show, but he plans to raise some serious issues about public disclosure of corporate campaign contributions before the Federal Election Commission on Thursday.

Colbert, who plays a conservative TV pundit on "The Colbert Report," wants to launch Colbert Super PAC, a type of political action committee that would allow him to raise unlimited amounts of money from corporations, unions and individuals to support or oppose candidates in the 2012 elections through independent expenditures such as TV ads.

Colbert is asking the commission on Thursday for a so-called media exemption to allow him to use his show's airtime, staff and other resources for his political action committee without having to publicly disclose them as in-kind contributions from Comedy Central's parent company, Viacom Inc.

Colbert has said those undisclosed contributions could include the use of his show's staff to create TV advertisements about candidates that would air as paid commercials on other shows and networks.

The Campaign Legal Center and Democracy 21 have urged the election commission to reject Colbert's request because they said it could open a "gaping loophole" in campaign disclosure laws.

"I would suspect that Mr. Colbert would not want his activities to serve as a vehicle for opening up major loopholes in the campaign finance laws that would allow companies to provide secret money to influence elections," said Fred Wertheimer, president of Democracy 21.

The two campaign finance watchdog groups warned that a favorable ruling for Colbert could spur many more undisclosed contributions to political figures who are TV hosts or commentators and who could opt to create their own super PACs to take advantage of any new loopholes.

The groups cited politicians such Sarah Palin, Mike Huckabee, Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum who already have traditional political action committees and are either working now, or have worked, as TV hosts or commentators.

"Many television show hosts who are serious politicians have political committees that could reap great financial benefit" if Colbert wins a favorable ruling, the groups wrote in a joint letter to the Federal Election Commission.

Trevor Potter, a prominent campaign finance attorney and a former Federal Election Commission chairman who is representing Colbert, declined to comment.

Potter heads The Campaign Legal Center but said he is acting solely as Colbert's attorney and has disqualified himself from having any role in the group's actions on the Colbert matter.

"The Colbert Report" has used satire to shine a light on campaign finance rules following the Citizens United ruling by the Supreme Court that helped pave the way for super PACs. Campaign finance reform advocates complained the ruling gave wealthy donors, particularly companies and unions, considerably more sway in politics.

Super PACs can accept unlimited contributions from corporations, labor unions or individuals, unlike candidates or traditional political action committees. Super PACs cannot contribute directly to candidates, however.

Asked if Colbert's effort to form a super PAC is serious or more of a stunt, Potter said Wednesday that the comic is raising important and complex questions that the Federal Election Commission is wrestling with.

"There are serious, legitimate, questions about what such a PAC has to report to the FEC," Potter said in an email response to The Associated Press. "Those questions are the subject of Mr. Colbert's advisory opinion request to the commission."

Colbert's campaign to create a political action committee is not without some comic jabs. His political action committee slogan is "Making a better tomorrow, tomorrow."

Colbert's comic flair surfaced in a recent letter to the Federal Election Commission.

"Colbert Super PAC will also pay usual and normal administrative expenses, including but not limited to luxury hotel stays, private jet travel and PAC mementos from Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcus," Colbert's lawyers wrote to the commissioners.

"This is not just about the cash," the comedian said during Wednesday night's episode of "The Colbert Report." "I will also accept credit cards."

In March, Colbert said he was forming a traditional political action committee. But that kind of committee has stricter rules on fundraising, so he announced plans to form his own super PAC instead.

Colbert has said any ads for Colbert Super PAC would not be coordinated with any candidate or party.

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High court undoes Scalia's pro-tobacco order (AP)

WASHINGTON – Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia exercised a rarely used power last fall to let Philip Morris USA and three other big tobacco companies delay making multimillion-dollar payments for a program to help people quit smoking.

Scalia, a cigarette smoker himself, justified acting on his own by predicting that at least three other justices would see things his way and want to hear the case, and that the high court then would probably strike down the expensive judgment against the companies.

This week, the court said he was wrong about that.

On a court that almost always acts as a group, Scalia singlehandedly blocked a state court order requiring the tobacco companies to pay $270 million to start a smoking cessation program in Louisiana. The payment was ordered as part of a class-action lawsuit that Louisiana smokers filed in 1996. They won a jury verdict seven years ago.

Scalia said in September that the companies met a tough standard to justify the Supreme Court's intervention.

"I think it reasonably probable that four justices will vote to grant certiorari," Scalia said, using the legal term to describe the way the court decides to hear most appeals, "and significantly possible that the judgment below will be reversed."

Not only did the justices say Monday they were leaving the state court order in place, there were not even four votes to hear the companies' full appeal. And the court provided no explanation of its action.

Scalia said through a court spokeswoman that he also had no comment on the matter.

Robert Peck, the Washington-based lawyer representing the Louisiana smokers at the Supreme Court, recalled thinking Scalia had made unwarranted assumptions about the case.

"I was really rather surprised he would issue the stay," Peck said of Scalia's order blocking the judgment from taking effect.

The case went to Scalia because he oversees the 5th Circuit, which includes Louisiana.

Justices have the authority to act on their own to issue an order that blocks another court's decision from taking effect, often in cases that are being appealed to the high court.

But in recent years they rarely have done so. The last time a justice acted alone in similar circumstances was in 2006, when Justice Anthony Kennedy blocked a court order to remove a giant cross from a public park in San Diego while the matter remained under appeal. The cross case still is working its way through the courts.

Thomas Goldstein, a Washington lawyer and close observer of the court, said: "This was a very rare and unusually assertive ruling by a single justice. The later briefing in the case seems to have persuaded the court, and maybe even Scalia himself, not to get involved."

In issuing his order, Scalia noted national concern over the abuse of class-action lawsuits in state courts and raised concerns about the companies' legal rights.

He said that without delaying payment, the companies might not be able to recover all their money if they ended up winning in the Supreme Court. The other companies in the case are Brown and Williamson Holdings Inc., R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and Lorillard Tobacco Co.

A Louisiana appeals court had a different take on the subject of delay, noting that the plaintiffs are aging and dying at a significant rate.

One of the two named plaintiffs, Gloria Scott, was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2000 and died in 2006.

___

Follow Mark Sherman on Twitter at www.twitter.com/shermancourt

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Bank of America expects loss after settlement (Reuters)

CHARLOTTE, N.C./NEW YORK (Reuters) – Bank of America Corp said it expects to take more than $20 billion of charges after settling with mortgage bond investors, resulting in a second-quarter loss.

The sum, which includes an $8.5 billion settlement, removes a question mark that had been hovering over the bank since October, and Bank of America's shares rallied.

"Investors can now start attaching a number to these unknowns and what they will cost the bank. With the swipe of a pen, they've dealt with a large chunk of these issues," said Paul Miller, a banking analyst with FBR Capital Markets.

Chief Executive Brian Moynihan is working hard to move past the mortgage crisis, and this settlement is the latest step in that process.

But the large dollar amounts linked to the settlement and the bank's other efforts to clean up mortgage exposure in recent months could weigh on the bank's capital levels as most banks are looking to boost capital and return more money to shareholders.

The bank was hit hard by toxic home loans after Ken Lewis, Bank of America's prior CEO, bought mortgage lender Countrywide Financial in 2008, just as the housing market bubble was bursting.

Other banks, including JPMorgan Chase & Co and Wells Fargo & Co, could now face pressure to resolve similar allegations, and new lawsuits may arise, analysts said.

A group of 22 investors, including BlackRock Financial Management, alleged that bonds it bought from Countrywide Financial were packed with mortgages that should never have been sold. Bank of America bought Countrywide, once the largest U.S. mortgage lender, in 2008.

Bank of America said that excluding items such as the settlement, second-quarter earnings could top the average Wall Street estimate.

CHEVY VEGA

The settlement is the third in six months for BofA, following similar deals with government-backed mortgage investors Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and insurer Assured Guaranty Ltd.

In January, the bank announced plans to settle with Fannie and Freddie for $2.8 billion. In April, BofA disclosed a $1.6 billion settlement with Assured Guaranty.

Last fall, CEO Moynihan said the bank would fight any such repurchase requests. He described talks with investors over claims as "hand-to-hand combat" and said some investors were looking for a better deal through repurchases.

Their attitude, Moynihan said, was "I bought a Chevy Vega but I want it to be a Mercedes."

"We're going to protect shareholders against that," he said during the company's third-quarter earnings conference call.

But Moynihan struck a different tone on Wednesday, saying the company was looking to put repurchase woes behind it in terms that would be favorable to BofA shareholders.

"Our job is to eliminate risks to allow this company to go forward," he said, dismissing suggestions from analysts that the bank did not put up a fight in the settlement process.

The repurchase dispute with investors began last fall, when a group of prominent mortgage securities holders threatened to sue over the toxic mortgages.

In December, the two sides avoided a court case by agreeing to settlement talks that have continued since then.

But the deal comes at a price for BofA. FBR analyst Miller said the settlement leaves little margin for error as the bank works to meet new capital requirements.

Other analysts are less concerned. Marty Mosby of Guggenheim Securities said the bank has $67 billion in excess capital under current rules -- and $26 billion under new proposed industry rules.

During a conference call announcing the settlement, BofA Chief Financial Officer Bruce Thompson said the bank projects it can replace the capital with earnings through the next two quarters.

Investors largely welcomed the settlement, as shares rose 3 percent to $11.14 in late afternoon trading.

"The bank has to get out of the litigation business and back into the banking business," said Greg Donaldson, founder of Evansville, Indiana-based Donaldson Capital Management, which owns BofA shares. Donaldson said the settlement was the best move he had seen from the bank in the last two years.

Bank of America said it expected to post a loss of 88 cents to 93 cents per share for the second quarter.

Excluding special items, it expects earnings of 28 cents to 33 cents a share. Analysts' average forecast was 28 cents, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

SIX OR SEVEN YEARS

The bank said charges would include the $8.5 billion settlement with bond investors, $5.5 billion to cover expected payments to other mortgage bond investors, and $6.4 billion in other charges linked to mortgages.

Separately, BofA said it would record a $2.5 billion gain in the quarter from the sale of Balboa Insurance and a chunk of its remaining BlackRock stake.

CFO Thompson also said during the conference call with analysts that sale and trading results were higher in the second quarter compared with a year ago, but lower than in the first quarter of 2011.

The settlement must still be approved in court, and small investors not part of the initial agreement could contest it.

An attorney for the investor group said the deal was good for all investors. The settlement will be shared among all investors in the securities, and the 22 institutional investors will not receive special benefits, Kathy Patrick, an attorney at Gibbs & Bruns LLP, said in an interview with Reuters' "On the Case" legal blog.

"I have a hard time seeing how anyone could recover more than this in six or seven years of litigation," Patrick said.

Patrick said Bank of New York Mellon -- the trustee for the mortgage-backed securities -- played a crucial role in the settlement.

The investors argued that the mortgages packaged into their bonds did not meet their specifications, and that Bank of America, which is collecting payments on the mortgages, was not doing enough to maximize the collections. Part of the settlement includes improvements in gathering payments, known as servicing.

"This settlement is likely to embolden the other plaintiff's lawyers to go after other banks and look for similarities in their securitizations," said Nancy Bush, a veteran bank analyst.

BofA is still negotiating with a group of state and federal regulators -- including a coalition of all 50 state attorneys general -- over allegations the industry improperly foreclosed on delinquent borrowers.

(Reporting by Joe Rauch and David Henry, additional reporting by Brenton Cordeiro in Bangalore and Lauren Tara LaCapra and Dan Wilchins in New York; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn, John Wallace, Gary Hill)

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2012 GOP candidate Cain: cut taxes, create jobs (AP)

GREENVILLE, S.C. – Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain rolled out an economic plan in this pivotal primary state Wednesday firmly believing it would drop unemployment to no more than 5 percent, but he acknowledged he was still crunching the numbers.

Cain's first campaign stop in this early-voting state was greeted with applause by about six dozen people at the NEXT Innovative Center, which supports high-tech start-ups and entrepreneurs.

The former CEO of Godfather's Pizza advocated a maximum tax of 25 percent on company profits and personal income, and end to the capital gains tax.

He said the U.S. must get its debt under control and that companies should not pay taxes on overseas profits that are invested back home.

A national sales tax should replace the federal income tax, he said, giving individuals and companies "certainty" about making purchases and investments. He wants a "restructuring" of Social Security so people can invest in their own retirement funds.

"This economic vision will produce a job for every home," he said. "Get government out of the way, get government off our backs and get the government out of our pockets."

In a brief interview after his remarks, Cain said he could not put an exact figure on how many jobs his plan might create.

"I don't have a number, we are working on that," he said. "But if we do these things, I am convinced the unemployment rate would be 5 percent or less."

South Carolina's unemployment in May was 10 percent, the seventh-highest in the country. Nationally, the jobless rate was 9.1 percent.

Cain joked that he had to join the ranks of the unemployed in order to pursue his mission of gaining the presidency, but that risk-taking was the heart of being a successful entrepreneur.

"I took the risk of being unemployed to become president," he said.

The 65-year-old businessman, talk show host and author was greeted enthusiastically at the center.

"I love what he had to say about Social Security," said Maria Jose Lehman, 45, of Greenville. Lehman said she worked for a financial services firm and is convinced that young people should be allowed to save for their own retirement.

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Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Defense in Casey Anthony case ready to wrap up (AP)

ORLANDO, Fla. – Casey Anthony's father broke into tears Wednesday when telling jurors about his suicide attempt some six weeks after his granddaughter's body was found, undercutting defense claims that the girl was not slain by her mother but accidentally drowned and that he helped cover it up.

Anthony, 25, is charged with first-degree murder in the death of Caylee Anthony in summer 2008. The prosecution contends she suffocated the child with duct tape. Her remains were found in the woods near her grandparents' home in December that year.

A grief expert also testified it is plausible for a young person dealing with a death to exhibit the same behavior Casey Anthony did in the month after prosecutors believe she killed her daughter. Several witnesses have said she spent her time partying and claimed the child was with an imaginary nanny.

Lead defense attorney Jose Baez said the defense should rest its case sometime Thursday, leaving only a short rebuttal by the prosecution. Judge Belvin Perry tentatively said closing arguments could come Saturday and that he would hand the case over to the jury that evening or on Sunday.

Still not known is whether Casey Anthony will take the stand.

George Anthony wrote in a January 2009 suicide note that he had unanswered questions about what happened to his granddaughter and never alluded to knowing what caused her death.

Defense attorneys, who have been trying to paint the Anthony family as dysfunctional, say Caylee drowned in her grandparents' backyard pool and that George Anthony disposed of the body.

Baez asked George Anthony about his attempt to overdose on pills. When prosecutor Jeff Ashton asked Anthony if he had bought a gun five months before that, Baez objected.

With the jury out of the room, George Anthony said he planned to use the gun to try to get his daughter's friends to tell him what happened to Caylee.

He said he chose to kill himself because "I needed at that time to go be with Caylee because I knew I failed her."

Ashton argued that the statements were valid for the jury to hear because they rebutted the drowning theory and implied that George Anthony didn't know what really happened to Caylee. Ashton also said the suicide note did not include any reference to George Anthony molesting Casey Anthony when she was a child, as Baez claimed in his opening statement.

When asked on the stand, Anthony again denied ever hurting his daughter sexually.

Judge Belvin Perry agreed the jury could hear about the gun purchase and the suicide note.

"It looks to me like someone opened the door and someone is trying to walk through it," he said.

When the jury came back, George Anthony started crying as he recounted the emotional month before his suicide attempt, in which he drove to Daytona Beach and tried to overdose on prescription medication. His daughter showed no emotion as he was crying.

He also said he never got the opportunity to confront his daughter's friends because law enforcement confiscated the gun the day after he bought it in August 2008. Casey was out on bond and staying in his home, and firearms are prohibited in a place where a person on bond is living.

Karin Moore, a law professor at Florida A&M University, said alluding to the suicide attempt was a misstep by Baez.

"I think it backfired on him," Moore said. "I think his intention was to craft an inference for the jury that George Anthony tried to commit suicide over the alleged abuse and death of Caylee. He opened the door and Ashton correctly pointed it out. "

Moore said she also thinks Baez was trying to avoid putting Casey Anthony on the stand.

"I think (Baez) did nothing but engender sympathy for George Anthony now the jury has contempt for Baez that could certainly reflect on Casey Anthony," Moore said.

Florida State University professor and grief expert Sally Karioth never interviewed Casey Anthony, but when defense attorney Dorothy Sims laid out a hypothetical scenario with facts from the case, she testified it wasn't inconsistent with grief she's observed in similar situations. Karioth previously testified in the South Carolina murder case of Susan Smith, who was convicted of drowning her children.

"Young adults are reflective grievers and will often act like nothing happened," Karioth said.

The defense also called the son of the Roy Kronk, the meter reader who discovered Caylee Anthony's remains, to the stand Wednesday. Brandon Sparks said his father first told him in November 2008 that he knew where the child's remains were and that he was "going to be rich and famous" because of the find — facts that Kronk denied under oath on Tuesday.

Sparks said when he asked his father in December why he waited so long to notify authorities, he said Kronk "didn't have a specific answer." The defense claims that Kronk moved the child's remains at some point between August and December in hopes of claiming a reward.

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French military confirms arms drops to Libyan rebels (AFP)

PARIS (AFP) – The French military confirmed on Wednesday that earlier this month it had air dropped arms shipments to Libyan rebels fighting Moamer Kadhafi's forces in the highlands south of Tripoli.

The NATO military operation in Libya was launched under a UN Security Council resolution authorising world powers to take action to "protect civilians" and this was the first time France has admitted arming rebels.

The news came as a surprise even to France's closest allies, and Britain -- which has joined Paris in spearheading the air campaign against Kadhafi -- distanced itself from the move and said it would not follow suit.

The Le Figaro newspaper and a well-placed non-government source said that France had dropped several tonnes of arms including Milan anti-tank rockets and light armoured vehicles to the revolt.

But Colonel Thierry Burkhard, spokesman for the French general staff, told AFP that the shipments were essentially of "light arms" such as assault rifles to help civilian communities protect themselves from regime troops.

Mahmud Shamman, a spokesman for the rebel National Transitional Council, the revolutionary high command, visiting Paris, told reporters he could not comment on the reported arms shipments.

The British foreign ministry was also cautious, telling reporters: "Our position is clear: there is an arms embargo on Libya.

"But at the same time UN Security Council Resolution 1973 allows all necessary measures to protect civilians and civilian populated areas under threat of attack," it said in a statement.

"We do think the United Nations resolutions allow, in certain limited circumstances, defensive weapons to be provided but the UK is not engaged in that. Other countries will interpret the resolution in their own way."

In New York, a UN diplomat speaking on condition on anonymity, told AFP that while there is an arms embargo a "close reading of the resolution would suggest air drops of arms are not illegal if they are to protect civilians."

Burkhard said France had become aware in early June that rebel-held Berber villages in the Djebel Nafusa highland region south of the capital had come under pressure from the Libyan strongman's loyalist forces.

"We began by dropping humanitarian aid: food, water and medical supplies," he said. "During the operation, the situation for the civilians on the ground worsened. We dropped arms and means of self-defence, mainly ammunition."

Burkhard described the arms as "light infantry weapons of the rifle type" and said the drops were carried out over several days "so that civilians would not be massacred".

According to Le Figaro, which said it had seen a secret intelligence memo and talked to senior officials, the drops were designed to help rebel fighters encircle Tripoli and encourage a popular revolt in the city itself.

"If the rebels can get to the outskirts of Tripoli, the capital will take the chance to rise against Kadhafi," said an official quoted in the report.

"The regime's mercenaries are no longer getting paid and are scarcely getting fed. There's a severe fuel shortage, the population has had enough."

A well-placed non-government source told AFP that 40 tonnes of weapons including "light armoured cars" had been delivered to rebels in western Libya.

According to Le Figaro the French arms shipments were dropped from planes across the Djebel Nafusa region, where Berber tribes have risen to join the revolt against Kadhafi's rule and seized several provincial towns.

The crates hold assault rifles, machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades, it said, and also European-made Milan anti-tank missiles, a powerful addition to the rebel arsenal that can destroy a tank or a bunker.

Qatar has also reportedly been involved in sending weapons to the rebels, and the Figaro report said that opposition fighters control two small desert air strips south of Djebel Nafusa where its planes have landed.

France has taken a leading role in organising international support for the uprising against Kadhafi's four-decade old rule, and French and British jets are spearheading a NATO-led air campaign targeting his forces.

Rebel forces are based in Benghazi in the east of the country, and hold a besieged enclave supplied by sea in the western coastal town of Misrata, but have been unable to mount a convincing advance on the capital.

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Police search Kabul hotel after Taliban attack kills 9 (Reuters)

KABUL (Reuters) – At least 10 Afghan civilians were killed when suicide bombers and heavily armed Taliban insurgents attacked a hotel frequented by Westerners in the Afghan capital late on Tuesday, Afghan officials said.

Helicopters from the NATO-led force killed the last three insurgents in a final rooftop battle, a coalition spokesman said. Smoke rose from the roof of the Intercontinental hotel as the sun rose over Kabul after a battle lasting several hours.

"At least 10 civilians, including hotel staff, were killed when six suicide bombers attacked the Intercontinental," Mohammad Zahir, the head of the Kabul police crime unit, told Reuters.

Sediq Sediqqi, a spokesman for the Afghan Interior Ministry, said at least six Afghans had been killed.

The attack came the night before the start of a conference about the gradual transition of civil and military responsibility from foreign forces to Afghans. The hotel was not one of the venues to be used by the conference or its delegates, an Afghan government official said.

It was also a week after President Barack Obama announced plans for the initial withdrawal of 10,000 U.S. troops from Afghanistan by the end of this year, with another 23,000 to leave by the end of 2012.

Reuters witnesses heard at least seven blasts over the course of more than two hours, with bursts of gunfire heard during the late-night attack on the Intercontinental, one of two main hotels used by foreigners and Afghan government officials in Kabul.

The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said there had been gunfire coming from inside the hotel.

"Two ISAF helicopters have ... engaged three individuals on the roof," coalition spokesman Major Tim James said. "The indications are that the three individuals on the roof have been killed."

One Reuters witness said smoke could be seen rising from the hotel, although no fires were visible. Afghan security forces surrounded the hotel and firefighters arrived after the last of the insurgents were killed.

Sediqqi said six or seven insurgents had been involved in the attack, one of the worst in the Afghan capital in months. "All have been killed," he said.

Zahir also said three police officers had been wounded as they cleared the hotel on the city's western outskirts.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said several fighters from the Islamist group had attacked the hotel.

Mujahid, who spoke to Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location, said heavy casualties had been inflicted.

The Taliban often exaggerate the number of casualties in attacks against Western and Afghan government targets.

FLARES, TRACER ROUNDS

One blast was heard at the start of the attack and then three more at least an hour later, one of the Reuters witnesses said. Bursts of gunfire were heard over the same period and flares lit up the sky over the hotel.

Reuters television footage showed police firing tracer rounds into the air as other officers moved through the hotel. Power was cut in the hotel and in surrounding areas after the attack.

The hotel, built on a hillside in western Kabul with heavy fortifications all around it, is often used for conferences and by Westerners visiting the city.

Police threw up roadblocks immediately after the blast, stopping people from approaching the area.

Violence has flared across Afghanistan since the Taliban announced the start of a spring offensive at the beginning of May, although Kabul has been relatively quiet.

The last major attack on a major Kabul hotel used by foreigners was in January 2008, when several Taliban gunmen killed six people in a commando-style raid on the nearby Serena hotel.

The increase in violence comes as NATO-led forces prepare to hand security responsibility to Afghans in seven areas from next month at the start of a gradual transition process that will end with all foreign troops leaving Afghanistan by the end of 2014.

The two-day conference to discuss the transition process was due to begin in a government building in the center of the city on Wednesday.

Violence across Afghanistan in 2010 was already at its worst levels since the Taliban were ousted by U.S.-backed Afghan forces in late 2001.

(Additional reporting by Omar Sobhani, Alistair Scrutton and Akram Walizada; Writing by Paul Tait; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

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Senate Confirms Former RIAA Lawyer for Solicitor General

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Senate Confirms Former RIAA Lawyer for Solicitor General

The Senate late Monday confirmed former Recording Industry Association of America lawyer Donald Verrilli Jr.to serve as the nation?s solicitor general.

Verilli, the White House deputy counsel, assumes the powerful position left vacant by Elena Kagan, who was elevated to the Supreme Court last year. The vote was 72-16 after lawmakers brokered a last-minute deal to avoid a threatened filibuster.

The solicitor general is charged with defending the government before the Supreme Court, and files friend-of-the court briefs in cases in which the government believes there is a significant legal issue. The office also determines which cases it will bring to the Supreme Court for review. Verrilli had told senators that he would resign if Obama asked him to take a position “based on partisan political considerations or other illegitimate reasons.”

Verrilli, one of at least five former RIAA attorneys appointed to the administration, is best known for leading the recording industry’s legal charge against music- and movie-sharing site Grokster. That 2003 case ultimately led to Grokster’s demise, when the U.S. Supreme Court sided with a lower court?s pro-RIAA verdict. Grokster produced a legal foundation which the RIAA used against file sharing service LimeWire, which shuttered last year and agreed to pay the labels $115 million to settle a lawsuit.

The elevation comes as lawmakers are moving to bolster copyright laws,�and as federal authorities employ�constitutionally suspect measures toward that end.

Until recently, Verrilli also was leading Viacom’s ongoing and flailing $1 billion copyright-infringement fight against YouTube.

A court dismissed the case last year, a decison Viacom is appealing. Viacom claims YouTube committed copyright infringement because it did not police the video-sharing site for copyright works uploaded by its users.

Meanwhile, Verrilli in 2008 told a federal judge in Minnesota that merely making copyright works available on file sharing networks amounted to copyright infringement — and that no proof of somebody else downloading those files was required.

That argument came in the first of three iterations of the infamous Jamie Thomas file sharing case brought by the RIAA. The judge eventual declared a mistrial of the first jury?s $220,000 civil judgment for sharing 24 songs on Kazaa.

Two more trials later, a third jury has rendered an almost $2 million verdict against Thomas for sharing the same two dozen tracks.

Photo: David Kravets/Wired.com

David Kravets is the founder of TheYellowDailyNews.com. Technologist. Political scientist. Humorist. Dad of two boys. Reporter since manual typewriter days. ((There is no truth.))
Follow @dmkravets on Twitter.

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