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  • 23
    Apr
    2013
    2:55pm, EDT

    Blast zone slowly comes back to life

    Jessica Rinaldi/Reuters

    People are escorted across Boylston Street on April 23 as residents and business owners are allowed to return to the street for the first time since the Boston Marathon bombings.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    BOSTON — A week and a day after the Boston Marathon bombings, business owners and residents began to return Tuesday to the six-block, cordoned-off area of the attack that investigators painstakingly scoured for evidence.

    It has been a long wait for Joy Lee and her employees at Samurai Boston, a store near the race’s finish line on Boylston Street.  Lee said she has been unable to get to tax and payroll documents since the bombings and she missed a deadline to file meal taxes. Even her car has been blocked off behind the police barriers still decorated with flowers and messages of support.

    "We have all the employees text messaging me every single day," Lee said as she waited to return to her business in a steady drizzle Tuesday. "They’re all looking for jobs. They have to pay the rent."

    Lee said she would take two employees with her back into the restaurant Tuesday to clean up and clear food gone bad from the refrigerators. She was one of many Boylston business owners expected to show up at the Hynes Convention Center to re-enter their shops under a staggered schedule laid out by the city.

    Boston Mayor Thomas Menino’s office released a plan Monday night to bring Boylston back to life after investigators handed the site back to the city in a brief ceremony. The plan allowed residents and business owners with essential staff to return to return block-by-block from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Tuesday. The city has not yet announced when the street will be reopened to the public.

    At the barricades on Clarendon and Boylston streets, where police allowed pedestrians and vehicles to pass Tuesday, a man and woman in running gear shared a long embrace before jogging away.

    Makeshift memorials remain, many of them bearing the names of the victims killed in the attack — Krystle Campbell, Martin Richard, and Lu Lingzi — as well as that of Sean Collier, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology police officer believed to have been slain Thursday by the alleged bombers.

    The prolonged closure may have untold long-term effects for some businesses in the area, but some Bostonians said Tuesday they’ll dig into their own pockets to ensure the shops and restaurants that line the area around the marathon’s finish line make a strong comeback.

    "I already made a reservation at Atlantic Fish Company," said Dan Gross, 30, an account executive at an advertising agency near Boylston. He is booked for 8:15 p.m. on Wednesday, and says if they’re serving, he’ll be there.

    The restaurant said that it remained closed "until further notice" in a statement on its website Tuesday.

    "I think everyone should just get back there and support the businesses," Gross said. "They lost a lot."

    John Berosh, 46, heard the first explosion from his office on the 22nd floor of an office building overlooking the race.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "I knew something wasn’t right," said the software engineer, an 18-year resident of the city. "I went to the window and saw a huge, hideous cloud of smoke coming up from the street." Then he saw the second bomb go off.

    Berosh, who said he watches the marathon from his office most years, said he’s ready for Boylston to get back to its usual bustle.

    "I am very excited," he said. "I am very proud to tell you that I was here at work last Thursday and Friday, just to hold the door for someone, smile at someone.”

    But like Lee, who’s worried about helping her employees make their rents, Berosh said it’s not just the business owners who have been set back by the closure.

    "Tip your waiters," Berosh said.

    An electronics repair store called iFixYouri on adjacent Newbury Street was shut for several days after the bombings.

    "We’re a small, family-run company, and the impact of what happened last week has been significant," said Michelle Zausnig, vice president of marketing for the Florida-based company. “Being shut down, it impacted us as a small business because we don’t have unlimited resources."

    The store saw a return to regular business when it re-opened last Friday.

    "We’re expecting to rise again, just like the city," Zausnig said.

    Related:

    • Suspect: We copied bombs from al Qaeda
    • Slain cop's sister: A 'nightmare come true'
    • Alleged bomber's dad: It's a set-up

     

    13 comments

    My prayers also go out to the forgotten people of West, Texas. Corporate malfeasance is not nearly as sensational as terrorism, I guess.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: business, boston, boylston-street, boston-marathon-bombing
  • 26
    Mar
    2013
    6:47am, EDT

    NJ toenail clippings to be tested for toxic metal spotlighted by Erin Brockovich

    Julio Cortez / AP

    Wind blows through a tarp hanging from a fence surrounding an industrial site in Garfield, N.J. where toxic chromium was spilled in 1983.

    By Noreen O'Donnell, Reuters

    Scientists plan to check toenail clippings in Garfield, New Jersey, to determine if residents were exposed to a toxic metal made infamous in California by environmental activist Erin Brockovich.

    Chromium, linked to lung cancer, leaked from the now-demolished EC Electroplating Inc. factory and polluted groundwater in a 1983 incident.

    Located 12 miles west of New York City, the area is on the federal Superfund list of hazardous waste sites. Some 30,000 people live in Garfield.

    "Concentrations in the groundwater, et cetera, are very high," Judith Zelikoff, a professor of environmental medicine at the New York University School of Medicine, told Reuters on Monday.

    In the 1983 incident, more than 3,600 gallons of a chemical solution containing chromium were discharged from a tank at the factory, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The solution got into the groundwater, which flows toward the Passaic River, about 2,500 feet west of the site.

    The city's drinking water comes from a different source and is not contaminated.

    The plume is about three quarters of a mile long and slightly more than an eighth of a mile wide, said Rich Puvogel, a project manager with the EPA.

    Detecting chromium in groundwater, soil and homes does not necessarily mean that people were exposed, Zelikoff said.

    "We hope to be able to relieve their anxiety," said Zelikoff, noting that scientists will begin recruiting volunteers for the toenail clippings within the next three weeks.

    Toenails grow slowly and may help to detect chronic exposure, she said.

    Very high levels of chromium were found at the factory - approximately 80,000 parts per billion, Puvogel said. Downstream from the site, the levels drop off by several orders of magnitude, he said. New Jersey sets a limit of 70 parts per billion.

    The residents' exposure would have come from inhaling or touching chromium that had seeped into their basements, especially during flooding.

    "When the water dries, it also leaves a chromium dust residue," Zelikoff said.

    Environmental activist Erin Brockovich and her team of lawyers are working to help Louisiana residents displaced by massive sinkhole. WVLA's Kris Cusanza reports.

    Inhaled chromium is a carcinogen that increases the risk of lung cancer, according to the EPA.

    Scientists, who became aware of the contamination last year, want to test up to 250 residents, including some who live directly above the plume and a control group living at least three miles away, Zelikoff said.

    Residents who agree to submit toenail clippings will receive kits containing stainless-steel clippers and instructions. They must be between 18 and 65 and cannot have taken chromium supplements or be smokers.

    Last year the EPA removed more than 753 containers and drums of industrial waste from the factory and 6,100 gallons of chromium-contaminated water. The building was demolished in October.

    Next week the agency will start sampling the soil at the site to determine what sources of contamination remain. 

    Erin Brockovich, a law firm assistant turned campaigner, rallied residents in a California desert town to sue Pacific Gas & Electric over a pollution incident - a battle that formed the basis for a 2000 movie in her name starring Julia Roberts.

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    56 comments

    Instead of rebuilding Afganistan or the rest of the world, how about cleaning up our own country ?

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    Explore related topics: business, epa, life, pollution, new-jersey, environment, us-news, featured, erin-brockovich
  • 5
    Jan
    2013
    10:17pm, EST

    California man says he can drive in carpool lane with corporation papers

    View more videos at: http://nbcbayarea.com.

    By Isolde Raftery, Staff Writer, NBC News

    When Jonathan Frieman of San Rafael, Calif., was pulled over for driving alone in the carpool lane, he argued to the officer that, actually, he did have a passenger.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    He waved his corporation papers at the officer, he told NBCBayArea.com, saying that corporations are people under California law.

    Frieman doesn't actually support this notion. For more than 10 years, Frieman says he had been trying to get pulled over to get ticketed and to take his argument to court -- to challenge a judge to determine that corporations and people are not the same. Mission accomplished in October, when he was slapped with a fine -- a minimum of $481.


    Frieman has been frustrated with corporate personhood since before it became a hot button issue in 2010, when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that corporate and union spending may not be restricted by the government under the First Amendment.

    At the heart of the high court ruling was the argument that corporations -- because they are composed of individuals – deserve protection under the First Amendment, which guarantees free speech. 

    Frieman, who faces a traffic court on Monday, plans to tell the judge that this isn’t about carpool lanes; it’s about corporate power.

    "I'm just arresting their power and using it for my service to drive in the carpool lane," he told NBC Bay Area's Jean Elle.

    University of San Francisco law professor Robert Talbot says Frieman’s argument may not hold up because it steers too far from the intent of carpool lane laws.

    "A court might say, ‘Well, it says person, and a corporation is a person, so that'll work for the carpool lane,’” Talbot told NBCBayArea.com. “It’s possible, but I doubt it.”

    In an opinion piece posted to the San Rafael Patch site on May 14, 2011, Frieman broke down his argument.

    A carpool lane is two or more persons per vehicle, he said. The definition of person in California’s Vehicle Code is “natural person, firm, copartnership, association, limited liability company, or corporation.”

    “Just imagine what THAT courtroom scene’ll be like,” he wrote.

    He imagined what he might say to the judge: “Your honor, according to the vehicle code definition and legal sources, I did have a ‘person’ in my car. But Officer so-and-so believes I did NOT have another person in my car. If you rule in his favor, you are saying that corporations are not persons. I hope you do rule in his favor. I hope you do overturn 125 years of settled law.”

    But before he can make grand proclamations, the officer who ticketed him must show up to court. Otherwise, his ticket may be thrown out. 

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • Police: 4 dead, including gunman, in Aurora, Colo., hostage situation
    • Tattoo photos lead to woman's arrest in global child porn investigation
    • What Supreme Court? Gay marriage battles rage in the states
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    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    316 comments

    An interesting twist. This is one ticket I want to see the officer go to court for.

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    Explore related topics: business, california, traffic, corporations, san-rafael
  • 12
    Apr
    2012
    7:32am, EDT

    Phone hacking lawsuits to be filed in US courts

    Rupert Murdoch, CEO of News Corporation, in this file image.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    LONDON -- Lawsuits over alleged phone hacking by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation are to be filed in United States courts for the first time.

    Mark Lewis, the lawyer who has been at the forefront of efforts to expose phone hacking at newspapers opened by News Corporation's British subsidiary, expects to file civil lawsuits on behalf of three alleged victims.


    One is believed to be connected to the late Diana, Princess of Wales and the Royal household while a second is linked to the England soccer team. The third is described as a "Hollywood case" because the individual was in contact with a celebrity. All three claim that the offenses took place while they were on American soil.

     

    Follow @alastairjam

    The threat of legal action in the U.S. is likely to expose News Corp to further embarrassing claims and bring the scandal closer to its headquarters in New York.

    Timeline: News Corp and the phone hacking scandal

    Lewis was flying to San Francisco Thursday, from where he will travel next week to New York in order to meet with U.S. lawyers to discuss the cases.

    In an email to msnbc.com Lewis confirmed reports that he expects to bring three lawsuits on behalf of clients and a fourth alleging wrongdoing at News Corp. He told the Daily Beast on Wednesday that the fourth lawsuit would center on "perhaps the dirty tricks that might have been used in order to further the commercial aims for News Corporation."

    At least one of the cases involves allegations that the phone of a U.S. citizen was hacked, and Lewis said more U.S. victims of phone hacking were likely to emerge.

    He told the Daily Beast: "This is getting wider. It's not just the people who were A-list or celebrities, but people who were in their circles — people who might call them or work with them."

    Meanwhile, police regulators in Britain on Thursday said senior detectives showed poor judgment in their close relationship with executives at Murdoch's News Of The World tabloid.

    A former executive at the newspaper, which was shut down in July 2011 amid public outrage at phone hacking revelations, was appointed as an adviser to London's Metropolitan Police, and his daughter also secured a job with the force.

    The Independent Police Complaints Commission said professional boundaries at the police force "became blurred," the BBC reported. 

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    Blind author's work recovered by forensic experts after her pen ran dry
    Syria deadline passes, no reported violence
    N. Korea official says Thursday rocket launch unlikely
    Drug smuggler needed: Mexico cartels, US battle in classified ads
    Raymond Aubrac, last leader of French Resistance movement, dies at 97

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    34 comments

    "this country is all about freedom" Really?!?!? We lost that years ago. Fewer and fewer people know what real freedom is in this country anymore. "Rights" have replaced "Freedom" in people's understanding, thanks to our education system (schools and the media).

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    Explore related topics: media, business, britain, murdoch, featured, news-of-the-world, phone-hacking
  • 12
    Mar
    2012
    8:15am, EDT

    Former steelworker hopes $2 billion chemical plant will revive Appalachia city

    Jason Cohn / Reuters

    First year apprentice ironworker George Vacheresse pauses during a class at Ironworkers Local 539 in Wheeling, West Virginia. Vacheresse was a steelworker for 17 years but decided to retrain after watching layoffs erode the workforce at his machinist shop over 17 years. He hopes his new skills will lead to a much higher-paying job.

    Jason Cohn / Reuters

    The town of Wheeling, West Virginia is emblematic of the economically struggling region it sits in, and could get a big boost from a new Shell chemical plant planned for the area. Real estate agents, restaurants, banks and others report a business jump that they expect to be made permanent by the arrival of chemical plants.

    Reuters reports from Wheeling, West Virginia — In George Vacheresse's lifetime, Appalachia has fallen from its prime when steel mills and coal mines anchored middle-class communities and offered hope there always would be enough work to go around.

    In this historically poor region nestled in the misty mountains of the eastern United States, most steel mills shut down long ago and the coal workforce has shrunk by 90 percent in the past 40 years.

    Now Vacheresse and other residents are counting on cheap natural gas from the massive reserves in the Marcellus and Utica shale rock formations to reinvigorate the region's economy.

    In the Northern Appalachia area alone, where West Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvania converge, billions of dollars of investment is planned by major companies, including most recently Royal Dutch Shell, to recover the gas and build new chemical plants.

    "I hope it gives us jobs for everybody," said Vacheresse, 39, who last fall joined an apprentice scheme at a Wheeling, iron workers' labor union to learn how to work in steel construction. He made the move after watching layoffs erode the workforce at his machinist shop over 17 years. He expects his new skills will lead to a much higher-paying job building Shell's planned new $2 billion cracker, industry slang for a chemical plant.

    "Something like this could carry our region for years and years," he said. Read the full story.

    Jason Cohn / Reuters

    Charles Comas, owner of Comas Family Barber Shop on Main Street in Wheeling, West Virginia, finishes giving a hair cut to regular customer John Oliver on March 6, 2012. Oliver, who has lived in Wheeling his whole life, remembers when the now sparsely occupied downtown was so packed with people "you couldn't walk down the street without bumping into someone." He is skeptical that the burgeoning shale gas industry or the rumoured Shell cracker plant will help the city.

    Jason Cohn / Reuters

    A community garden is seen in a vacant lot left over from one of few demolished buildings on Main Street in Wheeling, West Virginia. The city is struggling to find creative ways to deal with their down economy while waiting for new investment.

    Jason Cohn / Reuters

    First year Ironworker apprentices (left-right) Ian Welshhans, Daniel Truax and Jason Taylor practice their welding skills during a class at the Ironworkers Local 549 training facility in Wheeling, West Virginia on March 6, 2012.

    Jason Cohn / Reuters

    An old Ohio Edison electric plant, rumored to be the site for the first new U.S. chemical cracker plant in more than 20 years, is seen across the Ohio river from Moundsville, West Virginia.

     

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    93 comments

    Once this natural gas boom ends and the frackers are done raping the environment, polluting your water and padding their pockets with your community tax dollars, they'll drop you like a bad habit and move on to another community to rape and pillage leaving nothing behind but a bunch of toxic sludge  …

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    Explore related topics: business, economy, labor, west-virginia, shell, us-news, chemical-plant, appalachia, wheeling
  • 14
    Feb
    2012
    10:59am, EST

    When your Valentine's Day flowers absolutely, positively, have to be there overnight

    Adam Rivera/NBC News

    By Ronnie Polidoro
    Rock Center

    As FedEx finishes hundreds of thousands of overnight deliveries for Valentine’s Day, one might guess that the arrow in the FedEx logo belongs to Cupid – and since it is the company’s second busiest holiday, you wouldn’t be too far off.

    What today’s romantic procrastinators may not fully appreciate is that before Fred W. Smith founded FedEx in 1973, would-be Cupids had to plan ahead because overnight delivery wasn’t as streamlined as it is today.

    NBC News

    Today, FedEx is not just the company’s name but a verb Americans use every day to describe what you do when something “absolutely, positively has to be there overnight,” as the company’s slogan advertised starting in 1978.  But dropping off a package in your office’s mailroom with an overnight Airbill is just the first step of a well-choreographed ballet.

    “It never stops. It’s always going,” Sally Hammer, a 17-year FedEx veteran told NBC News.

    NBC News anchor and managing editor Brian Williams witnessed FedEx’s choreography first-hand while sorting packages, filling letter bags and even ‘shipping’ himself in the jump seat of one of the company’s new Boeing 777’s.

    Williams was unloaded at the FedEx World Hub in Memphis, where Rock Center received complete access to the “SuperHub,” which handles the bulk of the company’s overnight shipping operations.

    Vice President of the Memphis World Hub, John Dunavant told Williams, “About 45 packages a second will move through here and when it's all done…we'll have done 500,000 packages.”

    For example, a package traveling overnight from New York City to Los Angeles first takes a ride to Newark, where it’s loaded onto a plane to the SuperHub in Memphis. There, the package is taken to a sorting facility, where it’s placed label-side-up on a conveyor belt by a FedEx employee, then scanned, weighed and routed to the next plane departing for L.A.  

    It gets a little more complicated on Valentine’s Day with more last minute packages.  Luckily there is a ProFlowers warehouse nearby that allows customers to place orders as late as 11 P.M. CT on February 13, to still arrive by 10 A.M. on Valentine’s Day.

    As Tom Hanks’ character explained in the 2000 film Cast Away, the company measures its success not only by revenues earned but by time: on average, 10 million pounds of freight come through the Memphis facility every night, and each package must be sorted and boarded within five hours of arrival in order to reach its destination on time.   That five hour window is represented at the SuperHub by a clock with two competing times, Central Time – the actual time of day – and what FedEx employees refer to as Goal Time, the designated time that all packages must leave the facility to reach their overnight destinations.

    In late 2011, FedEx introduced the Boeing 777 to its fleet (more commonly known around the SuperHub as the Triple 7, or as Rock Center staffers call it, The Plane That Delivered Brian), with engines so energy-efficient that its fuel capacity can power the plane to fly more than half way around the world non-stop.

    After a night of hard work, Williams and FedEx’s founder and CEO, Fred W. Smith, sat down for an interview in front of one of the company’s beloved Triple 7s named Erica . All FedEx planes are given the name of an employee’s child.


    Smith, a former Marine and a veteran of the Vietnam War, outlined the basic idea of FedEx in his senior thesis at Yale University: with computers making businesses more and more efficient, “It was obvious to me that there had to be an entirely new logistics system that could get things from any point to any [other].”

    NBC News

    On its first night of business, the company once known as Federal Express had more planes than packages. But 38 years later, in 2011, FedEx shipped 3 billion packages and took in $39.3 billion in revenue. 

    “A lot of people make it work every day,” Smith told Williams. “The main thing is…to make sure everybody is pulling towards the same goal.”

    That concept is understood at FedEx’s central command center, where 431 camera feeds of the Memphis SuperHub are displayed across 104 monitors in real time.

    “Time is a very big issue; we want to make sure we push it to the limits,” says Flow Control Agent Antonio Vance, who monitors every package that comes through the hub and keeps them all moving smoothly.

    But employees like Vance aren’t the only ones monitoring the company’s operations, as FedEx learned the hard way when YouTube viewers around the world were stunned by a shocking video of a FedEx employee throwing a computer monitor over a fence at a gated driveway.

    According to Smith, FedEx had tried to deliver the package the day before, and the recipient left instructions to put it over the gate. 

    “So that's what he did, in an incredible way,” Smith said, also adding that the reason the video was shocking to so many people was because “it was out of character of FedEx.” 

    Smith is the first to acknowledge that slip-ups will occur from time to time. It wasn’t too long ago that he overnighted a personal package to a friend and his own company misplaced it.

    “I wasn’t too happy about it,” Smith said. However, “The secret about management is really to make sure that the people that you work with are not afraid to deliver you bad news.  If you start killing the messenger…I can promise you, you won't know anything pretty quickly.”

    Despite his obvious displeasure at the snafu, Smith generally remains a popular guy amongst his 300,000 employees worldwide and the 10,000 at the SuperHub: not only because his company is now the largest employer in the Memphis area but because employees and customers alike know that when they forget to mail a Valentine’s Day gift to their mom ahead of time, Smith’s company is there to help.

    Editor’s Note: Brian Williams’ full report ‘Absolutely, Positively’  airs Wednesday, February 15 at 9/8c on NBC’s Rock Center.

    15 comments

    I love that I'm a cog in the wheel of this amazing company/process. We're not perfect but if you consider the numbers, it's amazing there aren't more snafus. Thanks NBC for giving a balanced report.

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    Explore related topics: business, fedex, brian-williams, valentines-day
  • 12
    Jan
    2012
    2:55pm, EST

    Inside the secret industry of inmate-staffed call centers

    By msnbc.com staff and NBC News

    WNYT-TV

    Inmates at Greene Correctional Institution in Coxsackie, N.Y., staff a state Department of Motor Vehicles call center.

    When you call a company or government agency for help, there's a good chance the person on the other end of the line is a prison inmate.

    The federal government calls it "the best-kept secret in outsourcing" — providing inmates to staff call centers and other services in both the private and public sectors.

    The U.S. government, through a 75-year-old program called Federal Prison Industries, makes about $750 million a year providing prison labor, federal records show. The great majority of those contracts are with other federal agencies for services as diverse as laundry, construction, data conversion and manufacture of emergency equipment.

    But the program also markets itself to businesses under a different name, Unicor, providing commercial market and product-related services. Unicor made about $10 million from "other agencies and customers" in the first six months of fiscal year 2011 (the most recent period for which official figures are available), according to an msnbc.com analysis of its sales records.


    The Justice Department and the U.S. Bureau of Prisons don't break down which companies they do business with. But Unicor said inmates provide private call center service, including data review and sales lead generation, for "some of the top companies in America" under a federal mandate to help companies repatriate jobs they have outsourced overseas.

    In a fact sheet, Unicor asserts that prisoners in the program are less likely to re-offend and are better trained for full-time work upon release. All revenue goes back into the program, which "operates at no cost to the taxpayer," it says.

    The idea has filtered down to some of the states, among them Georgia, Arizona and New York.

    When New York residents call the Department of Motor Vehicles, for example, they might get an inmate at Greene Correctional Institution in Coxsackie, near Albany, or at Bedford Hills Correctional Facility for Women near White Plains, on the border with Connecticut.

    "Obviously, it saves taxpayer dollars," Brian Fischer, commissioner of the state Corrections and Community Supervision Department, told NBC station WNYT of Albany. "Number two, it provides what we call a transferable skill."

    Besides saving the state money, said Elizabeth Glazer, the state's deputy secretary for public safety, the program is "an investment in our state's overall safety."

    "When we help offenders build the workforce skills necessary to find viable employment after incarceration, we lessen the chances they will reoffend and end up back in the state's prison system," she said.

    The corrections department acknowledged that callers aren't told they're talking to a state prisoner. But they stressed that callers are protected — no personal information is displayed to the prisoners, who don't have access to computers, officials said.

    In the private sector, states usually partner with business-to-business firms to run the services — the companies provide the equipment and facilities, and the state provides the labor. One such firm is Televerde, a Phoenix company that partners with the Arizona prison system to provide marketing services for major companies that have included Hitachi and Microsoft.

    In a marketing paper, Microsoft says companies like Televerde "can reduce the burden on corporate marketing and local marketing teams can have more meaningful interactions with their customers." (Msnbc.com is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBC News.)

    For inmates, the appeal isn't the pay, which can be as low as 50 cents an hour. It's the training and the opportunity: "A lot of times, we need to feel like we are appreciated, and it builds self-esteem," John Howard of Brooklyn, N.Y., an inmate at Greene, told WNYT.

    "It allows me the opportunity to speak to different people of different nationalities, regardless of what ethnicity, and it makes me feel like 'Wow, I can do better,'" he said.

    Read the original story at WNYT.com

    But Danny Donohue president of the New York Civil Service Employees Association, criticized the program for prioritizing marketable skills for prisoners over providing jobs to "law-abiding citizens."

    It's "a bad idea generally and even worse considering the current economy," Donohue said.

    By M. Alex Johnson of msnbc.com and Bill Lambdin of WNYT-TV in Albany, N.Y. Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Pardon of violent criminals sets up Mississipi legal battle
    • 3 teens shot dead in Philly ambush
    • Number of Chinese students in US colleges soars
    • Questions linger in US soldier's death: Was it a game?
    • Safest route to Nome? Alaska fuel convoy waits for word
    • More see class conflict between rich and poor

    98 comments

    at least you should get someone who speaks english...

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    Explore related topics: business, crime, marketing, prisons, featured, b2b, call-centers
  • 9
    Jan
    2012
    6:16am, EST

    Meet the NBA tycoon and rapper's friend who could be president of Russia

    Maxim Shipenkov / EPA file

    Russian billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov, 46, speaks at a news conference after supporters nominated him as a presidential candidate on Dec. 15 in Moscow.

    By Robert Windrem, NBC News

    Who is Mikhail Prokhorov? That’s easy. He is the most interesting man in the world!

    Mikhail Dmitrievich Prokhorov, 46, is a singular figure in Russia and now the larger world. At 6 foot, 9 inches tall and thin, he is the Global Russian - very different from the short, dour New Soviet Man of decades past.


    A billionaire somewhere between 18 and 25 times over, he is a partying playboy who swears he has never tasted vodka. He is called Russia's most eligible bachelor and has been seen in the company of some of the world's most beautiful women. He is quick-witted, charming, droll and affable, someone who enjoys the spotlight, craves it in fact. In a literary sense, he is more Jay Gatsby than Dr. Zhivago.

    Although he is a Russian patriot, he also is a man of the world. He travels in a $45 million Gulfstream V corporate jet and can't seem to keep track of his $45 million yacht. His watch is reportedly worth $138,000.

    He owns a large house in one of Moscow's new gated communities. He’s been in a French court trying to retrieve a $30 million deposit he placed on what is purported to be the world's most expensive home -- the $700 million Villa Leopolda, built for a Belgian king on the Riviera. First he liked it, then he didn’t.

    He owns an NBA team – the New Jersey Nets -- and part of a billion-dollar arena being built in Brooklyn. His business partner in both is the rapper and entrepreneur Jay-Z. He’s received medals from the presidents of Russia and France and met U.S. Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, the latter of whom suggested he’d like to play with Prokhorov in any pickup basketball game.

    And now he’s running for president of Russia. Prokhorov was not born interesting. He arrived a simple comrade in the Soviet Union on May 3, 1965. His father was a member of the Soviet sports committee and his mother a scientist.

    New Jersey Nets owner and billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov plans to challenge Vladimir Putin for the Russian presidency. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    While privileged, his upbringing was nothing special for the day.  His parents sent him to English Special School No. 21 in Moscow, where he received a gold medal and was recommended by the local Komsomol (Young Communist League) for college admission.

    But first, he did what other Soviet youths were required to do. From 1983 to 1985 -- at the height of tensions between the U.S. and Soviet Union -- he served in the Soviet military. He also joined the Communist Party, though it doesn't appear he was ever much of a Communist. While in college, he sold stone-washed jeans -- his first capitalist venture-- under the brand name, "Yourself Jeans."

    But all that presents only an inkling of who he is.  Let's start with the money.

    Prokhorov went into banking after graduating from the Moscow Financial Institute with a degree in international economics. From 1989 to 1992, he was head of the International Bank for Economic Cooperation’s Management Board.

    Courtesy of Mikhail Prokhorov

    Mikhail Prokhorov, fourth from right, and other members of the Norilsk management team visit a mine in 2003.

    Then, in 1993, during the largely unregulated and highly controversial privatization of former state-controlled industries, Prokhorov and a partner, Vladimir Potanin, saw an opportunity. They engineered the purchase of Norilsk Nickel mines in Siberia through the then-small Uneximbank. He was 28 at the time, Potanin slightly older.

    It was a bargain, but hardly an instant bonanza. Workers hadn’t been paid for six months and the arctic terrain was polluted beyond most Westerners’ comprehension, according to published reports. Early on, Prokhorov was Mr. Inside at Norilsk, working on pollution control and financing, among other things, and negotiating with Soviet-spawned labor unions on compensation.

    Prokhorov doesn’t apologize for buying up dilapidated Soviet era properties for a song. He followed the rules, he will tell you. Some oligarchs succeeded more than others. He succeeded the most. He is credited with turning the inefficient Soviet nickel mines into one of the world's largest and most profitable natural resource corporations. And over the past decade he expanded his holdings to include palladium, gold and bauxite, from which aluminum is made.

    (Not everything at Norilsk is yet up to Western standards. In spite of large-scale spending on pollution control technology -- about $100 million, according to the New York Times --  the company is still one of the world's worst polluters, emitting nearly 2 million tons of sulfur dioxide annually, more than the entire nation of France.) 

    Detained, then honored
    Prokhorov became more than just an intriguing industrialist in January 2007, when he was detained for allegedly arranging prostitutes for guests at his annual two-week long Russian Christmas party at the French Alps resort of Courchevel. He was released without charges after spending four days in jail, and none of the women was charged. He later received an apology from French authorities, apparently arranged by Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. By 2011, he had been awarded the French Legion of Honor for arranging cultural exchanges.

    Reports on the affair by French and Russian publications offered jaw-dropping glimpses of Prokhorov’s gilded lifestyle. Paris Match reported that when the women were detained and their luggage searched, lucrative gifts were discovered, valued at between 20,000 and 300,000 euros (approximately $25,800 to $387,000 at the exchange rate at the time). Komsomolskaya Pravda reported that Prokhorov engaged a "face patrol" at his favorite Courchevel haunt, "Les Caves," to filter out all but the most beautiful people.

    He shrugged off his four days in French jail, noting that he had been a Soviet conscript.

    New Jersey Nets owner and billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov plans to challenge Vladimir Putin for the Russian presidency. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    Then there was the time he soiled one of the Soviet Union's -- and Russia's -- most historic icons: the Aurora, the Russian cruiser that fired the cannon blast that launched the Russian Revolution in 1918. Prokhorov rented the vessel permanently moored in St Petersburg in June 2009 for an evening of merrymaking to celebrate the first anniversary of his new magazine, the Russian Pioneer. The party became so rowdy that several millionaires jumped or fell into the Neva River and had to be fished out by authorities. Museum artifacts also were reportedly damaged.

    Prokhorov’s reaction to the resulting controversy? He offered to buy the ship and restore it.

    He is not beyond anger, though. When his sister was harassed and insulted by local youths at a Prokhorov Foundation event in 2009, he threatened business rivals who he said had paid them.

     “Since I was a child, I had a rule -- to punish crudity and disrespect towards women,” he wrote on his blog, according to a translation by the ReadRussia blog. “I see one simple and effective way to handle it: If the two gentlemen who financed this PR campaign do not apologize to my sister in the next two weeks, I will do what every man should: I will personally beat the @!$%# out of them."

    Asked later if he was serious, he responded, "Do you have any doubts? Those responsible made their apologies to Irina."

    All of this made him famous, at least in Moscow.  He was satirized on Russian television for his lavish lifestyle and his reputation as "Russia’s most eligible bachelor."

    It also caused him problems with the prudish Kremlin. He was pressured to sell his 25 percent stake in Norilsk to another oligarch, Oleg Derispaska, the owner of RusAl, the world’s biggest aluminum manufacturer. Propitiously, the deal was completed just before the 2008 economic downturn, resulting in a bonanza for Prokhorov. He received nearly $5 billion in cash as well as stock in Polyus Gold and stock and debt in RusAl, now the main sources of his net worth. 

    At that point, there was no stopping him. At a time when no one had cold hard cash, he was flush. He shrewdly diversified. 

    By 2009, he had controlling interests in metals companies (Polyus Gold, UC RusAl), banks (Renaissance Capital, MFK Bank), media outlets (RBC, Snob and Russian Pioneer magazines, FIT television channel, F5 web portal/newspaper), insurance (Soglassye), real estate (OPIN Investment and Development Group), electricity production (Quadra) and LED technology (Optogan).

    He also established a personal investment vehicle, ONEXIM, to control his various assets.

    Entering the international arena
    Then, in 2009, Prokhorov stepped onto the international stage.

    The New Jersey Nets were a mess, stripped of talent and suffering through a 12-70 season under owner Bruce Ratner, who had suffered enormous losses as he tried to move the team from northern New Jersey to a $6.4 billion real estate development in Brooklyn called Atlantic Yards. But five years after the 22-acre project had been announced, lawsuit after lawsuit had caused delay after delay. To make things worse, Ratner faced a Dec. 31 deadline to sell $500 million in tax-exempt bonds to build the Nets’ arena, to be called Barclays Center. Without them the project was going to die not with a bang but a whimper. And 2009 was not an auspicious time to get financing for anything, let alone a beleaguered basketball arena.

    Larry Busacca / Courtesy of Mikhail Prokhorov

    Mikhail Prokhorov and Jay-Z.

    Enter Prokhorov, who had played basketball and previously owned Euroleague power CSKA Moscow. He had been interested in buying the Knicks, but the Dolan family wasn’t selling. (Later after buying the Nets, he erected an 18-story billboard featuring him and business partner Jay-Z outside James Dolan’s offices at Madison Square Garden.)  An investment banker suggested an alternative, mentioning Ratner and his troubles.

    A deal was stuck over dinner in Moscow, and it was every bit as shrewd as any of Prokhorov’s Russian maneuvers. According to ONEXIM and Nets officials, he laid down a little more than $200 million in cash and got 80 percent of the team; 45 percent of the billion dollar arena, and an option to purchase up to 20 percent of the overall Atlantic Yards project at a bargain basement price. In exchange, he agreed to assume 80 percent of the team’s astronomical debt load -- more than $221 million -- and pay up to $60 million to cover losses while the team was stuck in New Jersey. He also paid a $4 million buyout fee so the team could move out of its isolated and decrepit digs near the Meadowlands and into Newark’s gleaming new Prudential Center. Moreover, when bond rating agencies wouldn’t give the arena bonds an investment grade rating, Prokhorov agreed to sink another $76 million into the project. (He wasn’t doing it for charitable reasons. If his partners can’t pay it back at 11 percent interest per annum, he gets 80 percent of the arena.) 

    Within weeks, a key eminent domain case was finally dismissed, the bonds sold and his investment was well on its way to his goal: a billion dollar valuation within five years.

    When asked by a reporter at a May 2010 press conference in New York if his purchase was part of a larger effort by Russian oligarchs to buy up Western sports teams, he smiled and drolly intoned, “Please tell America, I come in peace.”

    After he videotaped a message in his sister’s kitchen promising a championship in as little as one year and no longer than five, his reception from long-suffering fans long-suffering bordered on obeisance. At his first game as the team owner in October 2010, a steady stream of them approached the owner’s suite and thanked him profusely for buying the team. (Inside, bottles of Lafitte Rothschild 1982, valued at about $5,000 a pop, were scattered about for his guests.) 

    One night a couple of fans found themselves on a train from New York to Newark with their favorite team’s owner and his entourage. The reason? When it looked like traffic would prevent his caravan of limos from making the game, he had jumped on New Jersey Transit. His spokesman distributed a video of the trip showing one of the world’s richest men standing in the aisle of a New Jersey commuter train, joking in Russian with his friends. 

    He agreed to a “60 Minutes” profile that showed him in a trendy Moscow nightclub with scantily clad women half his age, posing with an AK-7, jet-skiing in the Maldives, working on his kick-boxing skills and claiming he really didn’t know where his yacht was -- it was docked in the south of France and available for lease for $325,000 a week. It was masterful image-making. Later, there was an only slightly tamer profile in the New York Times Sunday Magazine, headlined “An Oligarch of Our Own” The cover featured him legs spread slightly apart, looking ahead and holding out two basketballs as if astride the NBA world. 

    Suddenly, the guy who dealt with gritty environmental problems at a mine north of the Arctic Circle was not just an NBA owner, but a bona fide international celebrity. Everyone wanted to meet him.

    Maintaining mystique
    Despite his fondness for the limelight, Prokhorov remained private in ways. He might spend nearly $18,000 on lunch at a Midtown restaurant, but it was the restaurant owner who bragged about it to the New York Post, not Prokhorov. He might spend $30 million on a vacation with friends in the south of France, as French media reported, but he wouldn't confirm it or boast about it. Of course, he didn't deny it either. He understands mystique.

    Before entering politics, he refused to identify his favorite author, his favorite fictional character, even his favorite color. He said he didn't want the media or public to be aware of his "cultural biases." He did identify a favorite quote, from a French author: "Good advice is something a man gives when he is too old to set a bad example.

    He still hasn’t revealed his favorite color but he did disclose that he is an atheist and that his favorite book is Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s “One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich,” the magisterial work on life in Stalinist labor camps.

    Prokhorov’s entry into Russian politics was similarly contradictory. A week after denying he had any interest in politics, he agreed this spring to head a small right-wing political party called “Right Cause.” it was seen as part of the Kremlin’s “managed democracy,” that is a party created to give the country’s leaders “friendly opposition” from the right.

    He even met with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev at the latter’s residence, where Medvedev praised him as “quite revolutionary” and arranged a photo op in which the two were seated across a table -- better than a side by side standing shot, since Prokhorov is a foot and a half taller than Medvedev.

    Everything seemed to be going swimmingly as summer progressed.  Prokhorov poured money into the party, giving it publicity. He resigned as the head of his investment vehicle, ONEXIM, to devote all his time to politics. 

    But in fall, something changed. Vladislav Surkov, who as head of presidential administration is in charge of the Kremlin’s “managed democracy,” began calling on the phone, Prokhorov later said, demanding changes in party personnel, in the party’s list of candidates.

    Pushed by the Kremlin, the party finally ousted Prokhorov as leader in September.

    Prokhorov responded by holding a news conference where he blistered Sukrov as the Kremlin’s “puppet master,” although he pointedly did not criticize either the president or prime minister. Then he dropped out of sight.

    In apparent retaliation, Medvedev removed him from the Russian modernization commission and, ominously, Prokhorov’s application to have Polyus Gold listed on the London Stock Exchange was inexplicably delayed.

    But as resentment mounted after Putin’s announcement of his candidacy for president on Sept. 24, Prokhorov got back in, declaring himself an independent candidate for the office.

    Some critics see a Machiavellian hand behind Prokhorov’s political rebound, suggesting he is a “stooge” set up by the Kremlin to draw votes away from other opposition parties. He and those around him deny it.   

    In the unlikely event he is elected president in March --  polls show him with numbers in the low single digits -- there are some hints of what a Prokhorov presidency  would look like:

    By all accounts, he is calm in even the worst crisis and demands from his aides that they have Plans A, B, C, etc., at the ready.

    He is not a hands-on manager, preferring to trust a cadre of loyalists in their 30s and 40s to run his companies. But if he doesn’t like what he sees, he is quick to let someone go. The day he took over the Nets, he summarily dismissed the coach.  

    He is not a technocrat, having only lately begun using a cell phone. Although he claims he does not use a personal computer (too much information) and writes out his thoughts on yellow legal pads, his staff maintains both a personal website and a personal blog, regularly posting how he feels on life and business. He has recently branched out into Facebook and Twitter, but only because of politics. He told reporters in 2010, “I know of this iPad. I hope we never meet.”

    On the other hand, no NBA team makes more use of the iPad, even drawing up plays on it. And he’s not afraid to invest in new technologies. His latest venture is a $150 million investment in an electric car called the “Yo,” which will go on sale later this year.

    Politically, he is described as right of center, but liberal, somewhat like another basketball playing pol, Bill Bradley. He was friendly with Yelena Bonner, the late human rights campaigner and widow of Andrei Sakharov. He financed a memorial to Stalinist repression deep inside Russia.

    He has said he won’t criticize Putin, but has also said the system will collapse in five years unless it’s dramatically reformed. He calls himself a serious candidate and has vowed to give up partying if elected. He told one interviewer he may even marry if Russia feels it needs a first lady. Most recently, he has been seen in the company of Ksenia Sobchak, described as the Russian version of Paris Hilton, having posed for Maxim magazine. 

    Yet his quest for the presidency seems quixotic at best, cynical at worst. He still believes in the power of money. Shut out of state television, he tried to buy TV Rain, an independent satellite and online television operation. When that failed, he tried to acquire Kommersant, the Russian equivalent of the Wall Street Journal. No sale there either.

    So he is resorting to using the social media. He has a YouTube channel where you can watch “This Week in Prokhorov” or his latest commercial, where dressed casually in a letter jacket and white shirt, he tells voters, “I want to work for you.”

    He also makes clear that he wants to reform the system, not overthrow it. After all, few if any, have benefited more.

    “Revolution in Russia always resulted in loss of life and reduced living standards,” he wrote recently on his blog.

    He also indicated in other recent entries that he believes he is the right man to lead his country through what he sees as a pivotal period.

     “I believe that the next president must find in himself the will and courage,” he wrote. “And the people must clearly explain their vision and their actions. If he is honest, he will understand.”

    “… As president of the various structures -- in business, and not just business -- I have often resorted to the unpopular measures. Yes, it's difficult. Yes, sometimes you come across a lack of understanding and acceptance even in the immediate vicinity. Yes, sometimes you're risking much …on a grand scale, sometimes everything. But when you can clearly see the situation, you see that there is no alternative but  to do this.”

    Robert Windrem is a senior investigative producer for NBC News and a Nets season ticket holder. 

    58 comments

    Reading this article just sickens me. Who cares ! I am tired of the glory of the wealthy people. Just because you have money doesn't make you good at what you do. It seems entertainment is his forte rather than politics. Can he run a country? Can he put aside his fun for politics? It seems the Russ …

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  • 30
    Dec
    2011
    11:02am, EST

    Detroit churches face up to downsizing

    Detroit's struggles with a declining population and the near-death of the U.S. auto industry are well documented, but less well known are the travails of the local Catholic church, the latest institution in this failing city to face up to downsizing. 

    Reuters photographer Mark Blinch and reporter John Stoll visited two churches in the run-up to Christmas, one abandoned, another under threat of closure.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    The inside of the Martyrs of Uganda Catholic Church, which closed in 2006, is seen in Detroit on Dec. 18, 2011. When a Catholic church closes, the land and buildings go back to the archdiocese. The neighboring parishes can come and take their pick of relics or ecclesiastical equipment. If a new tenant doesn't materialize, criminals sometimes do. Thieves often strip the building of copper or pluck out stained glass.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    A damaged organ at the abandoned Martyrs of Uganda Catholic Church.

    The Martyrs of Uganda church, closed by the archdiocese in 2006, is today littered with rubble, collapsed confessionals and a broken organ. Moss grows on its floors. The windows are gone and support pillars are crumbling because stones have been removed.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    Chris Mitchell walks up the stairs at the St. Leo Catholic Church, which was built more than 120 years ago.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    People stand as they take part in the Sunday mass at the St. Leo Catholic Church in Detroit on Dec. 18, 2011. St. Leo, located in one of the most abandoned pockets of the nation's most depressed city, is operating on life support.

    The second church they visited, St. Leo, is on life support. It remains an integral part of the community, helping to keep its neighborhood afloat with a soup kitchen as well as free medical and dental care for local residents. But it is among nine parishes earmarked for closure in the Detroit area within the next few years.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    Larry Finklea eats his lunch at the soup kitchen in the basement of the St. Leo Catholic Church.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    Jerry McCullough, left, gets a check up by Dr. Ed Jelonek, who is working on his own free time, at the Order of Malta Medical and Dental Clinic for low income Michigan residents in the basement of St. Leo Catholic Church.

    The archdiocese has cut its parish count in Detroit's city limits to 59, down from 79 in 2000. The man in charge of the downsizing is Archbishop Allen Vigneron, who says he understands what's on the line at St. Leo and other churches.

    "I am very attentive to the good work that the Holy Spirit has already got us doing ... it's not my job to rip that apart, it's my job to keep these good things going in the future," he said.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    A woman walks past the St. Leo Catholic Church, which is among nine parishes earmarked for closure in the Detroit area within the next few years.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    A woman prays during the Sunday mass at the St. Leo Catholic Church.

    Read John Stoll's full report, Dark holiday in Detroit as church downsizes, and see more of Mark Blinch's pictures at Reuters' Photographers Blog.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    135 comments

    ... the point is, my friend, sadness that a once great city is on life support, not always because of its own internal problems, that a once vibrant archdiocese is also struggling ... that we live in a nation who allows the very wealthiest to thrive off of the lifeblood of the majority who grow ever …

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  • 30
    Nov
    2011
    4:03pm, EST

    How to make a profit in politics

    IEM / msnbc.com

    The red line in this chart shows the dramatic rise in the price of Newt Gingrich shares on the Iowa Electronic Markets' exchange for the 2012 Iowa GOP presidential caucus. "ROF" is "rest of field."

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    How many stockbrokers can boast about a trade that brought in more than 200 times their investment over the past six weeks? Political pundits could, if they had the foresight to "invest" in GOP presidential hopeful Newt Gingrich's prospects back in October.

    The Iowa Electronic Markets make it possible to do such a deal: The IEM operation, sponsored by the University of Iowa's Tippie School of Business as a economic research project, is the only market in the country that has the tacit blessing of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to let traders lay real money down on political predictions. In other contexts, this might be known as a "bet."


    Here's how it works: You can buy up to $500 worth of shares in a political proposition — for example, the proposition that Gingrich will finish either No. 1 or No. 2 in January's Iowa GOP presidential caucus. If the proposition pays off, you'll be paid $1 for each share. If it doesn't, the shares are worthless. Thus, the share price on a given day should reflect the traders' assessment that the prediction will come true.

    Researchers have reviewed the IEM's record since the Bush-Dukakis faceoff of 1988 and report that political prediction markets are at least as accurate as traditional political polling. During the 2008 presidential campaign, traders leaned toward a Democratic win more than a year before the actual election. Not much changed in the market after that year's party conventions.

    Gingrich, however, has experienced a huge shift in fortunes over the past six weeks, on the political circuit and on the IEM: His Iowa caucus shares were trading at just 0.3 cents on Oct. 13, but on Tuesday they reached 69.1 cents. (Ron Paul has just edged ahead of Mitt Romney as the runner-up.)

    "Gingrich is soaring," University of Iowa spokesman Tom Snee told me today. "He's actually gone up from yesterday. Today he's at 75 cents a share."

    That means every dollar invested in Gingrich in mid-October would yield $250 today.

    Now, before your head starts swimming at the prospect of making tens of thousands of dollars in the political game, here's a reality check: There's a limit to how much you can invest in an IEM proposition, and it's not just the $500 account limit.

    "You can only buy something if it's available for sale, and we're not going to have 166,000 shares for sale," Snee said. Right now, there's only about $5,000 total invested in the Iowa caucus market. The entire value of investments in all of the IEM's markets is about $185,000, held by about 1,200 traders. You couldn't possibly have spent the whole $500 buying up Gingrich shares at 0.3 cents per share.

    Here's how Iowa professor Joyce Berg, director of the IEM, explained the issue in an email passed along by Snee:

    "All IEM contracts in the RCONV [Republican Convention] market are issued by selling bundles (one of each contract in the market) for $1.  Because exactly one of the contracts will pay off, the IEM has exchanged $1 for something that will be worth $1.  In your example, for a trader to spend $500 on contracts selling at $0.003, there would need to be $500/.003 = 166,667 Gingrich contracts available.  The only way that could happen is if other traders had spent $166,667 purchasing bundles. The funds to trade the hypothetical trader’s gains come from other traders.  That is, for every gain, there is an equal loss in the market.

    "In other markets where traders can sell short, there are banks that guarantee the trades.  In the IEM, we don’t have that issue due to the way we use bundles to create contacts."

    So if you were hoping to use your political acumen to pay for a condo, the IEM can't help you. But there are some potential bargains out there. Heck, just a couple of weeks ago, Herman Cain's Iowa caucus shares were trading at more than 25 cents each. Now they're worth a penny. If you have a hunch that Cain can revive his fortunes, there's money to be made. How's that for an economic plan?

    More about prediction markets:

    • 2012 political market open for business
    • Market lays its bets on Oscars
    • Buying into all sorts of predictions
    • Flu forecasts come true
    • Pentagon kills 'terror futures market'

    To handicap the political marketplace, check out NBC Politics on msnbc.com. And to find out what's going on in the financial markets, check in with msnbc.com's Business section.

    Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    9 comments

    Paul in 2nd place over Romney? I like it! Who all is investing though? I'd sell my Gingrich shares right now if I could. ;)

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  • 29
    Nov
    2011
    5:51pm, EST

    Foreclosure fraud whistleblower found dead

    By msnbc.com staff

    A notary public who signed tens of thousands of false documents in a massive foreclosure scam before blowing the whistle on the scandal has been found dead in her Las Vegas home.

    NBC station KSNV of Las Vegas reported that the woman, Tracy Lawrence, 43, was scheduled to be sentenced Monday morning after she pleaded guilty this month to notarizing the signature of an individual not in her presence. She failed to show up for her hearing, and police found her body at her home later in the day.

    It could not immediately be determined whether Lawrence, who faced up to one year in jail and a fine of up to $2,000, died of suicide or of natural causes, KSNV reported. Detectives said they had ruled out homicide.

    Lawrence came forward earlier this month and blew the whistle on the operation, in which title officers Gary Trafford, 49, of Irvine, Calif., and Geraldine Sheppard, 62, of Santa Ana, Calif. — who worked for a Florida processing company used by most major banks to process repossessions — allegedly forged signatures on tens of thousands of default notices from 2005 to 2008.


    Trafford and Sheppard were charged two weeks ago with 606 counts of offering false instruments for recording, false certification on certain instruments and notarization of the signature of a person not in the presence of a notary public. You can read a .pdf version of their indictment here.

    Police said at the time that the alleged scam had thrown into question the legality of most Las Vegas home foreclosures in the past few years, leaving many people living in foreclosed-upon homes that they unknowingly don't actually own.

    "I would suggest you review your documents and bring them to an expert and an attorney," said John Kelleher, chief deputy attorney general for Nevada's fraud unit.

    131 comments

    Whistle-blower commits suicide,,, Usually they die by flying off a cliff,,, I wonder if the judge who is giving flack to Citi Bank is going to die in his home or car of mysterious circumstances,,, It is no wonder the major money players who created this financial crisis haven't been sent to jail yet …

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  • 25
    Nov
    2011
    12:06am, EST

    Black Friday shopping starts on Thursday

    Andrew Gombert / EPA

    Shoppers line up outside Toys R Us in Times Square, New York, New York, Nov. 24, 2011. The store opened its doors at 9 p.m. on Nov. 24 to entice early Black Friday shoppers. Black Friday is the day following the Thanksgiving and marks the unofficial beginning of the Christmas shopping season with stores offering special deals.

    By Rich Shulman

    I get tired just looking at this madness.


    Chris Keane / Reuters

    Joni Sappington looks at a brochure for Toys R Us as she stands in line in Pineville, North Carolina Nov. 24, 2011.

    Chris Keane / Reuters

    A customer runs into a Toys R Us store as it opens in Pineville, North Carolina Nov. 24, 2011.

    Chris Keane / Reuters

    A customer stands in line with a toy vehicle at Toys R Us in Pineville, North Carolina Nov. 24, 2011.

    Andrew Burton / AP

    A customer shops for video games in the Toys R Us in Times Square in New York on Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011.

    Andrew Burton / AP

    A customer waits in line to pay for items inside the Toys R Us in Times Square in New York on Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011.

    Michael Nagle / Getty Images

    Black Friday bargain hunters wait in line at Toys R Us, which opened at 9 PM Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 24, 2011 in New York City.

    Michael Nagle / Getty Images

    Black Friday bargain hunters carry their purchases out of Toys R Us, which opened its doors at 9 PM Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 24, 2011 in New York City. Marking the start of the holiday shopping season, Black Friday is one of retailers' busiest days of the year.

    Stores are opening earlier than ever and the mad dash for Christmas bargains is already on, and retailers are desperate for shoppers' business. NBC's John Yang reports from Chicago's Magnificent Mile.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    13 comments

    Why even bother with the American holiday known as Thanksgiving. Just make if a f%&*ing shopping day, and get it over with. Who the ef cares about being thankful and grateful anyway, the almighty dollar and how much people believe they are saving is what matters.

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Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

Science editor at msnbc.com, author of "The Case for Pluto," winner of the National Academies Communication Award for Cosmic Log in 2008. Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for msnbc.com. Check out Cosmic Log's archives by following the links below, and see Boyle's full biography at http://bit.ly/boyle-bio

Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News Blogroll

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The Case for Pluto
Alan Boyle's first book tells the story of Pluto's ups and downs as well as the discoveries of other dwarf planets in our own solar system and even more alien worlds beyond. Buy "The Case for Pluto" ...

Rich Shulman

is a multimedia editor at msnbc.com. Before that, he was a picture editor at Corbis and the Director of Photography at the Everett, Wa. Herald.

Rich Shulman Blogroll

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  • The Digital Journalist
  • Sportsshooter
  • Rob Galbraith

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Most Commented

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