18 FebWealthy Donors Join Effort to Improve Campaign Finance System …

ALBANY ? The push to improve the state?s campaign finance laws has gained an unlikely ally: some of New York?s wealthiest political donors.

A new group called New York Leadership for Accountable Government unveiled an agenda on Wednesday that hewed to what Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo laid out in his State of the State address last month, including support for the creation of a system of public financing for state campaigns and lowered contribution limits.

Government reform groups have pushed those ideas for years. But the newly formed coalition attracted attention at the Capitol because of its unusual roster of supporters, who include deep-pocketed business leaders to whom lawmakers typically turn for high-dollar donations.

Among the representatives of the group at a news conference on Wednesday was Sean Eldridge, the president of Hudson River Ventures, an investment fund. Mr. Eldridge hosted a fund-raiser last year with his fianc?, Chris Hughes, a founder of Facebook, that raised several hundred thousand dollars for Mr. Cuomo.

Mr. Eldridge said New York?s campaign finance system was ?built for the big donor, not for the average voter.?

?I would love to have fewer fund-raisers,? he said. ?I would love to see our elected officials talking to all of the voters, not just the people who can write big checks.?

Among the prominent individuals from the business world who are members of the new group are Barry Diller, the chairman of IAC; Edgar M. Bronfman Sr., the former chief executive of Seagram; and Jerome Kohlberg, a co-founder of Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. David Rockefeller is also part of the coalition, as is Jonathan Soros, son of the billionaire financier George Soros.

The group also includes a number of former public officials, including Edward I. Koch, a former New York City mayor; William H. Donaldson, a former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission; and several former members of Congress, among them Harold Ford Jr. and Scott Murphy.

Making a case for curbing the influence of money in state elections, Mr. Murphy, an upstate Democrat who was defeated in 2010, invoked the success of the British singer and songwriter Adele.

?She?s not part of the music elite; she?s not somebody that came through the system,? Mr. Murphy said. ?I think that?s a perfect parallel for what we?re trying to do. We want to open up the system, let more voices be heard, let that new voice come out that nobody?s ever heard of, that?s not from a traditional source, that doesn?t have access to money to get involved in politics.?

Source: http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/02/15/wealthy-donors-join-effort-to-improve-campaign-finance-system/

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11 FebWashington state governor to sign gay marriage bill on Monday (Reuters)

SEATTLE (Reuters) ? Governor Christine Gregoire plans to sign newly passed legislation on Monday to legalize gay marriage in Washington state, making it the seventh with a law on the books to recognize same-sex nuptials, her office said on Thursday.

A statehouse signing ceremony in Olympia, Washington’s capital, was slated for 11:30 a.m. local time on Monday. The bill won final legislative approval from the state House of Representatives on Wednesday by a vote of 55-43.

The measure will not take effect before early June. Opponents have vowed to seek its repeal at the polls in November, but they cannot begin collecting signatures for a petition to overturn the measure by referendum until it is signed into law.

House approval of the Senate-passed bill came a day after a federal appeals court handed gay rights advocates a key legal victory in California by declaring a voter-approved gay marriage ban in that state to be unconstitutional.

Democrats, who control both legislative bodies in Olympia, accounted for the lion’s share of support for the bill. The stage for swift passage of the measure this year was set after Gregoire, a Democrat in her last term of office, announced last month that she would endorse the legislation.

Several prominent Washington-based companies employing tens of thousands of workers in the state also have supported the bill, including Microsoft, Amazon and Starbucks. Opponents were led by Catholic bishops and other religious conservatives.

STATE BY STATE

Supporters of same-sex marriage are pushing similar statutes in Maryland and New Jersey, and a referendum to legalize gay marriage in Maine has qualified for the November ballot there.

Six other states already recognize gay marriage — New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont, New Hampshire and Iowa — as does the District of Columbia.

Gregoire, in a statement issued after Wednesday’s vote, said Washington state would “no longer deny our citizens the opportunity to marry the person they love.”

“We tell every child of same-sex couples that their family is every bit as equal and important as all other families in our state,” she said.

Still, the measure cannot take effect before June 7, three months after the conclusion of the legislative session.

In the meantime, opponents of same-sex matrimony said they would seek to overturn the legislation via one of two ballot measures — a referendum for repeal or an initiative defining marriage as the exclusive domain of heterosexual couples.

The initiative would need 241,153 signatures of registered voters by July 6 to secure a place on the November ballot. A repeal would need just half the number of signatures by June 6.

If a repeal referendum qualifies for the November ballot, the gay marriage law would be suspended until the election and certification of returns, meaning December 6, before it is either repealed or goes into effect.

But qualification of a proposed initiative defining matrimony as restricted to one man and one woman would not, in and of itself, prevent gay marriages from proceeding under the newly passed statute starting on June 7.

It remains unclear whether gay weddings performed in the interim would be nullified if an initiative were to pass in November.

There is precedent in California for handling such a situation. California’s Supreme Court legalized gay marriage in 2008, only to see voters approve a state constitutional amendment banning same-sex matrimony six months later.

The state’s high court later upheld the gay marriage ban, known as Proposition 8, but ruled that 18,000 same-sex weddings officiated between May and November 2008 were still legal.

A federal judge later ruled Prop 8 unconstitutional, a decision upheld on Tuesday by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Legal experts said that ruling, while narrowly tailored to California, could ease the way for a successful court challenge in Washington state should voters ban gay marriage at the polls.

(Reporting by Nicole Neroulias; Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by Tim Gaynor)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120210/us_nm/us_gay_marriage_washington

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22 DecFormer 2nd Mile board members: We needed to know (AP)

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. ? Former board members of Jerry Sandusky’s charity say its CEO never told them about a 2002 shower incident that is the focus of child sexual abuse charges against the retired Penn State assistant coach. If they knew Sandusky had been banned from bringing kids on campus, they say they could have taken steps to better protect children a decade ago.

“Not one thing was said to us,” said Bradley P. Lunsford, a Centre County judge who served on the Second Mile board between 2001 and 2005. “Not a damn thing.”

If more information had been given to board members, they “would have asked the follow-up question: Why? You don’t know? Who knows? Who can we talk to? Has this been reported to the police?” Lunsford said. “I guarantee you there would have been a competition among all those people to be the first to ask the question, `Why is he not allowed on campus?’”

Lunsford and four other former board members at The Second Mile point the finger at Jack Raykovitz, a close friend of Sandusky’s who ran the charity until resigning following the former coach’s Nov. 5 arrest.

A former prosecutor, Lunsford said Raykovitz had an obligation to tell the board. “There are a number of people around that table who have been involved with children’s charities for years and there’s a very good chance that if given accurate information about what the allegation was, there’s a lot of people around that table who could have done something about it.”

One of Raykovitz’s vice presidents said Raykovitz also shared little information with his managers about a 2008 sexual abuse complaint that led to the current criminal charges against Sandusky.

And the head of Clinton County’s child welfare agency, where the 2008 investigation began, said he told Raykovitz’s wife in November 2008 that Sandusky had been spoken to about getting “too close” to children involved with the charity. Gerald Rosamilia said Raykovitz’s wife, Katherine Genovese, who helped run The Second Mile, did not define what was meant by “too close” or give a timeframe.

Raykovitz defended himself in a telephone interview, saying he acted appropriately at all times. “There have always been steps in place to protect kids,” he said.

The grand jury that charged Sandusky with 52 sexual abuse-related counts involving 10 boys said the former coach “found his victims” through The Second Mile and committed many of his offenses inside Penn State football buildings.

The nonprofit had thrived since its creation in 1977 because of Sandusky’s prominence as a defensive coach at Penn State, its close ties to university donors and leaders, and its use of Penn State’s athletic fields for its camps serving at-risk children. Then-coach Joe Paterno often served as master of ceremonies at The Second Mile fundraisers.

Paterno, 84, led Penn State football for more than 45 years until early November, when the sexual abuse charges against Sandusky shook the entire university and claimed the jobs of major college football’s winningest coach and the school’s president, Graham Spanier.

Now, with The Second Mile’s future in doubt, it is unclear whether Raykovitz properly handled the charity’s response to the 2002 case.

Penn State athletic director Tim Curley testified that a graduate assistant had told him in 2002 only that he had seen “inappropriate conduct” that made him feel uncomfortable, and nothing of a sexual nature. But Mike McQueary, now an assistant coach, testified to the grand jury that he told Curley he saw what he believed to be Sandusky raping the boy, who he said was about 10.

Curley, who has been charged with perjury and failure to report a sex crime, testified he told Raykovitz of inappropriate conduct and that Sandusky was prohibited from bringing youth onto the Penn State campus.

Asked what Curley told him, Raykovitz cited a Nov. 6 Second Mile statement that referred only to inappropriate conduct: “At no time was The Second Mile made aware of the very serious allegations contained in the Grand Jury report.”

The statement also said Curley, who has been placed on leave, told Raykovitz the shower incident “had been internally reviewed and that there was no finding of wrongdoing.”

But Lunsford said the charity’s board couldn’t take action in 2002 that might have prevented other assaults of children “if there’s a cover-up from the source.”

Even if Raykovitz had only limited information, he still should have acted more aggressively in 2002 when contacted by Curley and should have viewed Curley’s ban on Sandusky bringing Second Mile kids to campus as “a red flag,” Lunsford said.

As the person in charge, Raykovitz was legally required to provide the board all available information whether he believed it was true or suspected it was false, Lunsford said.

“We still need to know. That’s our job,” he added. “By not telling us, it essentially rendered us ineffective and we had no chance to help those children.”

Informed of Lunsford’s comments, Raykovitz said, “He can feel anything he wants to feel.”

Charles Markham, retired president of Uni-Marts Inc. and a Second Mile board member from the late 1990s until about 2004, said that Raykovitz never discussed the 2002 case with him personally or at board meetings. “If I’d known anything in 2002, I would have had a hard time keeping it under my hat,” Markham said.

Two other former board members ? Larry Snavely, who runs a State College-based higher education marketing firm, and Donald Cross, a retired Centre County school employee ? said Raykovitz never mentioned the 2002 allegation. Another former member said he was not told, but asked that he not be publicly identified.

David Woodle, acting CEO, refused to address concerns raised by board members about Raykovitz’s handling of information regarding the 2002 shower incident, saying to do so would be a distraction from the goal of helping serve children.

The board of directors of a children’s charity is responsible for making sure that it operates under reasonable policies and procedures to protect children, according to Daniel Borochoff, president of Chicago-based Charity Watch. Individual board members can face lawsuits for failing in their oversight duties, and The Second Mile insures its board members against such claims.

The Second Mile has been named in two civil complaints, including one that seeks to preserve the charity’s assets.

David Marshall, a Washington, D.C., lawyer who represents other accusers, said: “It may have been only Sandusky who laid his hands on these children, but it is clear that a number of other individuals and agencies placed the children in harm’s way by knowingly taking actions that allowed the abuse to continue even after they became fully aware of it.”

Raykovitz also is facing questions about his handling of the 2008 complaint.

Rosamilia, the Clinton County youth services chief, said he had informed Raykovitz’s wife in November 2008 that his office was terminating its relationship with The Second Mile because of an abuse complaint. He said he had not identified the target of that complaint, but that Genovese eventually guessed correctly that it was Sandusky.

Rosamilia, who said he mentioned his conversation with Genovese to investigators working on the current prosecution, also recalled Genovese saying that a member of The Second Mile board planned to speak with Sandusky about staying away from Second Mile events involving children.

Raykovitz said Rosamilia’s description of the conversation with his wife is incorrect. He would not elaborate. Attempts to reach Genovese were unsuccessful.

Raykovitz referred questions about what he did in 2008 to a prior statement, which said that when Sandusky told The Second Mile he was being investigated because of allegations made “by an adolescent male,” the organization separated him from “all of our program activities involving children.” The Second Mile statement makes no mention of the sexual nature of the 2008 complaint.

He said in the interview last week some staff at The Second Mile were informed in 2008 that the complaint was the reason Sandusky was not participating in programs serving children, but only on an “as-needed basis.”

Bonnie Marshall, the charity’s vice president for development, said Raykovitz described the 2008 complaint to her and other senior staff as a general abuse complaint, not one of a sexual nature.

She said Raykovitz explained that Sandusky would be taking a break from programs with children but would continue fundraising.

She said she also was unaware of Genovese’s conversation with Rosamilia, and was not aware that anyone at the charity had ever spoken to Sandusky about getting too close to The Second Mile children.

In 2009, when Sandusky left the charity’s board, Raykovitz told the staff that child welfare officials had issued a finding of abuse against Sandusky, Marshall said. But, she added, Raykovitz described it only as a general complaint being pursued by an angry mother who had accused Sandusky of wrongdoing, not a complaint of sexual abuse.

“I thought he would have told me that this was something really bad,” Marshall said. “And he didn’t.”

___

AP National Writer Jeff Donn and AP researchers Judith Ausuebel and Monika Mathur contributed to this report.

___

The AP National Investigative Team can be reached at investigate(at)ap.org

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111219/ap_on_sp_ot/us_penn_state_the_second_mile

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23 Oct‘Survivor’ favorite to run for Indiana governor

FILE – In this May 19, 2010 file photo, former “Survivor” contestant Rupert Boneham poses for a photo as he attends the CBS Upfront presentation in New York. Boneham, 47, announced Saturday, Oct. 22, 2011, that he’s seeking the Libertarian Party nomination for Indiana governor, saying he wants to take on the state’s political establishment because he feels voters deserve better. (AP Photo/Peter Kramer, File)

FILE – In this May 19, 2010 file photo, former “Survivor” contestant Rupert Boneham poses for a photo as he attends the CBS Upfront presentation in New York. Boneham, 47, announced Saturday, Oct. 22, 2011, that he’s seeking the Libertarian Party nomination for Indiana governor, saying he wants to take on the state’s political establishment because he feels voters deserve better. (AP Photo/Peter Kramer, File)

(AP) ? Rupert Boneham won over TV viewers during 2004′s “Survivor: All-Stars” ? earning a nifty $1 million as the overwhelming choice for fan favorite on the reality show. Now the bushy-bearded Boneham is hoping Indiana voters will find him just as charming.

Boneham, 47, announced Saturday that he’s seeking the Libertarian Party nomination for Indiana governor, saying he wants to take on the state’s political establishment because he feels voters deserve better.

At a news conference in Indianapolis, Boneham said he’s the best candidate to replace Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels, who has reached his term limit and can’t run next year, because he’s “not beholden to any special interests.”

In prepared statements circulated later by his campaign, Boneham said he wants to run as the Libertarian candidate because he thinks Indiana voters deserve an alternative to “the dysfunctional state of our current government.”

“I have only one interest: Empowering Hoosiers to give back to their communities. If the government puts up roadblocks, then they should be repealed,” Boneham said.

“Hoosiers have consistently voted in professional politicians and look at the results. Hoosiers should have a different choice in 2012,” he said in the news release.

Boneham, who’s known for wearing tie-dyed shirts, won $1 million when he was voted fan favorite in 2004′s “Survivor: All-Stars.” He donated a portion of his winnings to his Indianapolis-based charity, Rupert’s Kids, which provides mentoring and job-training to at-risk youths.

Boneham formed an exploratory committee in August for a possible gubernatorial bid and said he wanted to gauge public support to see if people are ready to elect him.

Among the candidates who are seeking to replace Daniels, Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Pence and former Democratic Indiana House Speaker John Gregg are the early favorites.

Sam Goldstein, the state chair of the Libertarian Party of Indiana, said he’s “very excited” about Boneham’s announcement.

“His nomination would be a great asset to the party and I look forward to working with him and his campaign team should he win the nomination at our convention next spring,” Goldstein said in a statement.

The party, which will hold its convention April 14, said Boneham has been a supporter and a member of the Libertarian Party for nearly a year.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-10-22-Survivor-Indiana%20Governor/id-e76a161bed7a4bfc96c43d640a395e65

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08 SepMexico ruling party asks mayor, governor step down (AP)

MEXICO CITY ? Mexico’s ruling party on Tuesday asked the governor of Nuevo Leon state and the mayor of its capital city to step down temporarily while police investigate an arson that killed 52 people and a casino corruption scandal.

President Felipe Calderon’s National Action Party, or PAN, said in letters sent to Nuevo Leon Gov. Rodrigo Medina and Monterrey Mayor Fernando Larrazabal that they should leave their posts so that the probe into last month’s deadly casino arson attack doesn’t become “a struggle between political forces.”

Larrazabal is a member of the PAN but Medina belongs to the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party.

Larrazabal’s brother, Jonas, has been detained for questioning in a casino-related corruption probe after videotapes became public showing him taking wads of cash inside an unidentified casino just days before the fire in the Casino Royale.

The newspaper Reforma, which published the images of Jonas Larrazabal, estimated that one wad of cash, stuffed inside a cell phone box, contained 400,000 pesos ($32,000). Reforma reported that Jonas had visited at least three casinos to collect money in the weeks before the August 25 fire.

Jonas Larrazabal’s lawyer, Jesus Martinez, has said that his client goes to casinos for fun, like any customer, but also sells them cheese, mezcal and other products from the southern state of Oaxaca.

Fernando Larrazabal told Multimedios television in Monterrey he would consider his party’s suggestion to step down and announce a decision on Wednesday.

“I was backed by National Action but those who chose me were the people of Monterrey,” he said.

The party said Medina should also step down so authorities can investigate whether officials in his administration are working with organized crime.

This request is justified by “the obvious support state police officers gave to the criminals that set fire to the Casino Royale,” the PAN said referring to the arrest of a state police officer in the case.

The state police agent was caught in a surveillance video inside an SUV outside Casino Royale, presumably connected to the attack.

Authorities say five others arrested in the case confessed to being members of the Zetas drug cartel. Authorities are investigating the crime as a presumed extortion attack by the gang.

A cable from the U.S. consulate in Monterrey, obtained by WikiLeaks and dated July 2009, said two brothers who are the largest casino operators in Monterrey’s metropolitan area illegally donated US$2.5 million each to Adalberto Madero, the former mayor of Monterrey and a PAN member, and Zeferino Salgado, the current PAN mayor of San Nicolas and the PAN’s candidate for federal congressman for the San Nicolas congressional district.

“In addition to campaign contributions, Madero and Zeferino are said to also receive a monthly percentage of the revenue from the casinos,” the cable said.

Salgado, who is now a transportation ministry official, denied the accusation.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mexico/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110907/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_mexico_casino_corruption

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