Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Japan and China lead flight from the dollar

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
London Telegraph
Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Japan and China led a record withdrawl of foreign funds from the United States in August, heightening fears of a fresh slide in the dollar and a spike in US bond yields.

Data from the US Treasury showed outflows of $163bn (£80bn) from all forms of US investments. "These numbers are absolutely stunning," said Marc Ostwald, an economist at Insinger de Beaufort.

Asian investors dumped $52bn worth of US Treasury bonds alone, led by Japan ($23bn), China ($14.2bn) and Taiwan ($5bn). It is the first time since 1998 that foreigners have, on balance, sold Treasuries.

Mr Ostwald warned that US bond yields could start to rise again unless the outflows reverse quickly. "Woe betide US Treasuries if inflation does not remain benign," he said.

The release comes a day after the IMF warned that the dollar was still overvalued and likely to face "some depreciation in the medium term".

The dollar's short-lived rally over recent days stopped abruptly on the data, increasing pressure on US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson to shore up Washington's "strong dollar" rhetoric at the G7 summit this week.

The Greenback has already fallen below parity against the Canadian Loonie for the first time since 1976 and has touched record lows against a global basket. It closed at $2.032 against the pound.

David Woo, an analyst at Barclays Capital, said Washington was happy to see the dollar slide. "They don't care so long as the fall is not disorderly. They see it as a way of correcting the deficit. " he said.

FULL STORY CLICK HERE

Russia's Putin : "Iran Is Not Afraid" Of US, Israel "Believe Me"

Darryl Mason
Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Russia's President Vladimir Putin has confirmed that he is backing Iran against the full force of the NeoCon-led propaganda campaign designed to force people in the US, the UK, Australia and across Europe to accept the 'reality' of the need for a new war in the Middle East.

Putin recently declared that Iran does not possess nuclear weapons, is not pursuing a nuclear weapons program and poses "no threat" to any nation, least of all the United States.

But the NeoCons have their heart set on bombing Iran before President Bush leaves office, and they don't let the fact that nobody, including President Bush himself, acknowledges that Iran currently poses a nuclear weapons capability threat, to mess with their blood-soaked dreams.

Putin made clear that Iran feels no fear from the threats of military action coming from the United States or Israel :

"Threatening someone, in this case the Iranian leadership and Iranian people, will lead nowhere," Putin said Monday during his trip to Germany. "They are not afraid, believe me."

Support amongst US allies for a War On Iran is thin, at best, and the United States closest Iraq War ally, Australia, recently pledged to not support any military action on Iran. France has also retreated from a 'pro-war' position on Iran, as has the United Kingdom.

But barely known to most in the West is that Putin is not alone in backing Iran against the threats of military strikes from the United States and Israel. Putin has the support of China, most of the 'Stans (including Afghanistan and Pakistan) and more than a dozen other countries who have lined up with China and Russia under the umbrella of new trade and economic alliances.

Putin also recently told a summit of energy-rich Caspian Sea bordering nations that they should not allow the United States to use their territory for staging attacks on Iran.

In the past two years, Iran has cut new energy deals with China, Russia, Pakistan and India worth hundreds of billions of dollars. China and Russia have both publicly stated that their energy deals with Iran fall under the "national interest" category, which the US and Australia used to justify their illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq.

Trade and economic alliances are always backed by military alliances, as shown by recent joint war games hosted by China and Russia. How else do you defend to the hilt your trade interests other than with the force of your military?

Just to ram home the point that Russia and China will not tolerate any attacks on Iran, Putin has now placed his arsenal of long range, strategic bombers on airborne stand-by for the rest of October. They will be patrolling most of the world's skies, with a particular focus on the Pacific, interestingly enough at the same time the United States will be holding some of its biggest airborne 'war games' in decades.

Putin also recently told a summit of energy-rich Caspian Sea bordering nations that they should not allow the United States to use their territory for staging attacks on Iran.

Bush warns of World War III if Iran goes nuclear

AFP
Wednesday, October 17, 2007

WASHINGTON (AFP) - US President George W. Bush said Wednesday that he had warned world leaders they must prevent Iran from getting nuclear weapons "if you're interested in avoiding World War III."

"We've got a leader in Iran who has announced that he wants to destroy Israel," Bush said at a White House press conference after Russia cautioned against military action against Tehran's supect atomic program.

"So I've told people that, if you're interested in avoiding World War III, it seems like you ought to be interested in preventing them from having the knowledge necessary to make a nuclear weapon," said Bush.

Minority Report for the Majority

Kenneth Wong
Cadalyst
Oct 16, 2007

Predicting where crime would happen next sounds like a wild idea, a concept possible only in the realm of science fiction, like Phillip K. Dick’s short story “Minority Report.” But lately some technology vendors have been combining crime statistics, weather data, geospatial data, and predictive algorithms to create a magical brew that can forecast when and where the next crime wave will most likely hit.

In Richmond, Virginia, Police Chief Rodney Monroe was once a skeptic. “When my IT people told me we could predict where the crime would occur, I just scratched my head,” he recalled.

In 2005, according to City-Data.com, the Richmond Police Department (PD) registered 755 criminal incidents, which was more than twice the national average of 325. Monroe could have easily predicted the crime rate would remain so — or get a lot worse — if no drastic measure was taken. So he decided to create a Law Enforcement Analytics (LEA) dashboard combining the cumulated 911 reports, police reports, citywide events, and graphical data.

The Birth of LEA
LEA is a joint operation, so to speak. The dashboard is built on the WebFOCUS BI (business intelligence) software platform from Information Builders. Using ESRI ’s ArcGIS software, it displays aggregated crime data, mapped by location and sector. Clementine, a data-mining and analytics software from SPSS, is responsible for predicting possible criminal patterns based on civic events, weather, and historical data.

LEA came online in various phases between 2005 and 2006. According to Intelligent Enterprise magazine, “Richmond PD’s new system integrates and analyzes information every eight hours (at the end of every shift), and it delivers timely insight to top officers responsible for each city sector (with broader deployment to individual patrol cars planned for this year). The dashboard not only shows up-to-date crime statistics mapped by area, it delivers alerts that users can customize based on their role and area of responsibility.”

Kevin Quinn, vice-president of product marketing at Information Builders, remembered the demonstration of LEA. “I was pretty impressed,” he said. “For example, on Halloween, they [Richmond PD] predicted there would be an increase in vandalism-type crimes, but if it rains, it reduces crime in certain areas, so based on that, they were able to deploy their forces efficiently.”

Monroe, who once admitted he felt like “a fish out of water” because he didn’t know “the first thing about technology,” now says, “I’m a believer.” In March, he flew to Chicago, Illinois, to accept the 2007 Gartner BI Excellence Award on behalf of Richmond PD.

GIS to BI: Welcome!
Mergers and acquisitions have become the quickest method of growth in the high-speed business world these days. Information Builders’ Quinn reasoned, “Large organizations now have so many different sources of information from the ERP [enterprise resource planning] systems they have inherited. We have a single platform for tapping into every one of them. And nearly all of them have some kind of location information — ZIP codes and area codes, for example.”

So Information Builders is now pitching its WebFOCUS BI platform as the place where business data (such as inventories, sales, customer locations) can join hands with geospatial data.

Richmond PD’s LEA dashboard uses a combination of technologies — ArcGIS from ESRI, WebFOCUS from Information Builders, and Clementine from SPSS — to predict where crimes will most likely occur.

“ESRI’s GIS and WebFOCUS share a common Java architecture enabling developers to easily add a GIS component to business intelligence applications using a set of Java APIs,” noted Information Builders. “Little or no training is required to use the GIS/mapping functionality of WebFOCUS. End users view the new mapping function as part of their existing applications. Analysts and power users can easily toggle between a map and business intelligence application to suit their needs. In addition to having information displayed on maps, users can select data from a map and easily move it into a report for detailed metrics in user-selectable formats including HTML, PDF, and Excel.”

WebFOCUS software is marketed as server solutions. A single-processor Windows server configuration, for example, starts at $25,000. A larger Unix box or mainframe configuration may cost as much as $130,000. This includes unlimited Web deployment, Quinn said. The WebFOCUS GIS Adapter add-on is priced at approximately $15,000-$20,000. Users will need an ArcGIS license, which is also available from Information Builders.

The Next Phase
Until recently, data-mining and GIS have largely been confined to the government sector, Quinn observed, but the affordability and proliferation of technology will make it possible for the commercial and private sectors to adopt these solutions.

The merging of business and geospatial data represents “a huge opportunity for [GIS developers] to penetrate the commercial sector,” Quinn pointed out. “These applications will help companies study where their customers are, who they are, and how they do business.”

Now that GIS is forging an alliance with BI, what’s next? Apparently, tracking moving objects. “Tracking the real-time locations of trucks, trains, and people via cell phones, GPS, and RFID [radio frequency identification],” Quinn predicted.

Setting The Stage For a North American Union Currency

Dana Gabriel
Op-Ed News
October 16, 2007

We live in a time of sky rocketing trade deficits. The housing bubble is ready to burst, and more and more jobs are being outsourced. America has become more of a service-based economy, resulting in a lower number of goods being exported. We are witnessing the death of the middle class by design. The dollar is being further devalued and its collapse is imminent. The global elite are looting the economy and setting the stage for a North American Union currency. They are the ones orchestrating the devaluation of the dollar, and will pose as our saviors by offering a single currency called the amero as their solution. Through the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) of North America, working groups are busy integrating the U.S., Canada, and Mexico into a North American Union. Those who do favor a European Union style continental integration view the idea of a unified currency as essential. Abandoning the dollar will be very unpopular with many Americans, but as it continues its painful collapse and becomes weaker, arguments for a regional currency will only be further bolstered.

Many argue that a regional currency and a North American Union will be needed in order to compete with the European Union and the euro. There seems to be no end to the dollar’s woes as it continues to hit record lows against the euro. Large and ever growing trade deficits with China further threaten the dollar, and the euro is competing as the international foreign reserve currency. A single North American currency is nothing new as the idea has been floated around for some time. In 1999 , economist and former Canadian Member of Parliament Herbert G. Grubel published his paper, “The Case for the Amero: The Economics and Politics of a North American Monetary Union.” It is interesting that he gives 2010 as the possible timetable for the introduction of the amero. This happens to coincide with the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) task force’s report, “Building a North American Community,” which also states the target year of 2010 for the implementation of their recommendations in matters of economics, politics and security. This report is considered by many to be the blueprint for the SPP, which was signed in March of 2005. It is through the SPP process that a North American Union is being created. The proposed amero would be a single North American fiat currency. This would give the global elite control of North America through the power of currency creation and would further facilitate in the consolidation of wealth and power in the region.

The CFR supports a switch to regional and global currencies, and an end to national currencies. They have had their tentacles in almost every administration, with the goal of destroying U.S. sovereignty. Benn Steil, the CFR’s Director of International Economics said, “countries should abandon monetary nationalism. Governments should replace national currencies.” The CFR wishes to divide the economies of the world into three different regions, each with its own currency. Ending monetary nationalism will result in the loss of economic sovereignty. In an article entitled “The Death of Three Nations,” Alan Burkhart states, “Our currency will be replaced with the Amero. And we’ll be one giant step closer to the UN’s perverse dream of a one-world government.” A North American Union and the amero are only one small part of the New World Order’s agenda to enslave humanity.

Many consider Robert Pastor to be, “the father of the North American Union,” as he has been one of the leading advocates for deeper integration. He envisions a North America with its own currency, the amero. He was one of the vice chairs of the “Building a North American Community” report. He often uses word semantics, and by referring to a North American Community instead of Union, it sounds less ominous and threatening, when there is really little difference. According to Pastor, a time is coming soon when a common currency will be needed to compete with the euro. He has said that another 9/11 terrorist attack could create the right climate needed to advance integration into a North American Community. He stated,”What I’m saying is that a crisis is an event which can force democratic governments to make difficult decisions like those that would be required to create a North American Community.” After a terrorist attack or an economic collapse, many more would accept the idea of the amero and a North American Union as both reasonable solutions.

In May of this year David Dodge Governor of the Bank of Canada said that a unified currency with the U.S. was a real possibility. Bob Chapman, publisher of the news letter, the International Forecaster, said that the amero, “will be presented to the American public as the administrations solution for dollar recovery.” Steve Previs, a vice president at Jefferies International LTD., a London investment firm, has openly prompted a move over to the amero. Speaking of the amero, he said that it, “is a proposed currency for a North American Community which is being developed right now between Canada, the U.S., and Mexico.” He went on to say that the agenda is a, “borderless community, much like the European Union, with the U.S. dollar, the Canadian dollar, and the Mexican peso being replaced by the amero.” A couple of weeks ago, BankIntroductions.com was informing their clients that the amero could be introduced as a North American currency sometime in the next ten years. If there wasn’t already enough proof that the amero and the North American Union agenda are real and not some made up conspiracy theories, former Mexican President Vicente Fox only reaffirmed these suspicions in interviews on the Larry King Show and on the Daily Show with Jon Stewart. Fox is a true globalist, and on the Larry King Show he expressed that President Bush has been working towards a single currency similar to the euro. On the Daily Show, he argued in favor of a North American Union, using the EU as its model. This was an incredible admission by a most senior former government official as he publicly advocated for the creation of a North American Union and its own currency. This was not a slip of the tongue as it was meant to present this agenda in a positive manner, test the waters, and further condition the people for its eventual implementation if we are unable to stop it.

There is an even bigger gap between rich and poor, and the death of the middle class is almost complete. It is the multinational corporations who benefit from trade deals like NAFTA and CAFTA, and a North American Union will be no different. The corporate takeover of North America is a destructive cycle that will only serve to further widen the gap between rich and poor. The unholy alliance between government and multinational corporations has been exposed on many levels. This is no longer our government, as they have ceased to be for the people and have become for the rich, by the rich, and for the rich as big business interests come before our own. The amero is part of the integration of the U.S., Canada, and Mexico into a North American Union. The current global crisis and the dollar’s imminent collapse could be the right climate for the introduction of a regional currency. The amero will mean the end of our financial sovereignty, and will further undermine America’s ability to control its own economic independence.

Friction over weak dollar expected at G-7 meeting

Kevin G. Hall
McClatchy Newspapers
October 16, 2007

WASHINGTON — When the finance ministers of six leading developed nations come to Washington later this week, they’ll bend Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson’s ear about the weak dollar and gripe that it’s hurting their exports.

They won’t find much sympathy.

Paulson will be in no mood to talk up the dollar, which has nose-dived against many leading currencies, because the weak greenback has sent U.S. exports soaring by almost 13 percent year over year through August. And that’s offsetting some of the economic pain from the crumbling U.S. housing sector.

What’s been good for U.S. exporters of airplanes, car parts and farm products hasn’t been so hot for rivals in Canada, Europe and parts of Asia, who now find their goods more expensive on the global market than U.S-made and U.S.-grown goods.

Group of Seven (G-7) ministers from Germany, France, Italy, Great Britain, Canada and Japan are expected to press Paulson on Friday to talk up the dollar in hopes that it will slow the dollar’s slide. The dollar has lost more than 8.1 percent of its value so far this year against the euro, the currency of 12 European Union nations, and that’s on top of last year’s drop of 8.2 percent.

For the first time in three decades, the U.S. and Canadian dollars are virtually on par. For Canadian energy companies and mining giants, whose commodities are priced globally in U.S. dollars, that means they earn less for their products when measured by their own currency. And although Canada’s online pharmacies still offer bargains to American prescription-drug consumers because of differing industry cost structures, dollar parity has hurt them, too.

“It has affected business negatively … the perception has decreased sales, for sure,” said Alan Flowers, a spokesman for Candrugstore.com in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Paulson has said repeatedly that a strong dollar is in the U.S. interest, but financial markets determine the value of freely traded currencies. The U.S. dollar’s value has eroded relative to other currencies because of the U.S. economic slowdown, the Federal Reserve’s recent half-point cut in lending rates and strong economic growth in Europe.

“I think Paulson may have to talk nice, but he won’t be forced to do anything more than that,” said Adam Posen, the deputy director of the Petersen Institute for International Economics, a think tank in Washington.

In fact, behind the scenes, Paulson is likely to tell the Europeans to look east, not west, to resolve their trade problems. European powers did little to help Washington make its case that China’s fixed exchange rate makes its products artificially cheap. Now Europeans are shouldering the brunt of the dollar-euro realignment while China’s exchange rate remains pegged to the dollar, so China doesn’t suffer.

“I think, if anything, he’s going to be sort of smirking and saying, ‘You guys could have gotten on board and helped us pressure the Chinese,’” Posen said. “I think the game is not going to be about coordinating or making any promises, but getting together to confront the Chinese.”

This year’s G-7 meeting in Washington stands out from past gatherings because finance ministers won’t be focused much on the outside world.

“For the first time, much of the agenda and problems come from inside the G-7, rather than outside,” said John Kirton, a lecturer at Canada’s University of Toronto and director of the G8 Research Center there.

Finance ministers will focus on problems in the U.S. credit and mortgage markets, he said, which have spilled across the Atlantic to banks in France and Germany and north to Canada, forcing central bankers to intervene with cash to keep markets functioning properly.

“It may have started in the U.S., but it’s a collective G-7 problem,” Kirton said.

The United States of Subprime

RICK BROOKS and CONSTANCE MITCHELL FORD
The Wall Street Journal
October 11, 2007

As America’s mortgage markets began unraveling this year, economists seeking explanations pointed to “subprime” mortgages issued to low-income, minority and urban borrowers. But an analysis of more than 130 million home loans made over the past decade reveals that risky mortgages were made in nearly every corner of the nation, from small towns in the middle of nowhere to inner cities to affluent suburbs.

The analysis of loan data by The Wall Street Journal indicates that from 2004 to 2006, when home prices peaked in many parts of the country, more than 2,500 banks, thrifts, credit unions and mortgage companies made a combined $1.5 trillion in high-interest-rate loans. Most subprime loans, which are extended to borrowers with sketchy credit or stretched finances, fall into this basket.

High-rate mortgages accounted for 29% of the total number of home loans originated last year, up from 16% in 2004. About 10.3 million high-rate loans were made in the past three years, out of a total of 43.6 million mortgages. High-rate lending jumped by an even larger percentage in 68 metropolitan areas, from Lewiston, Maine, to Ocala, Fla., to Tacoma, Wash.

To examine the surge in subprime lending, the Journal analyzed more than 250 million records on mortgage applications and originations filed by lenders under the federal Home Mortgage Disclosure Act. Subprime mortgages were initially aimed at lower-income consumers with spotty credit. But the data contradict the conventional wisdom that subprime borrowers are overwhelmingly low-income residents of inner cities. Although the concentration of high-rate loans is higher in poorer communities, the numbers show that high-rate lending also rose sharply in middle-class and wealthier communities.

Banks and other mortgage lenders have long charged higher rates to borrowers considered high-risk, either because of their credit histories or their small down payments. As home prices accelerated across the country over the past decade, more affluent families turned to high-rate loans to buy expensive homes they could not have qualified for under conventional lending standards. High-rate loans are those that carry interest rates of three percentage points or more over U.S. Treasurys of comparable durations.

The Journal’s findings reveal that the subprime aftermath is hurting a far broader array of Americans than many realize, cutting across differences in income, race and geography. From investors hoping to strike it rich by speculating on condominiums to the working poor chasing the homeownership dream, subprime loans burrowed into the heart of the American financial system — and now are bringing deepening woe.

Get news and analysis on the cooling housing market from the Developments blog. Plus, share your thoughts on risky loans in a blog forum.

The data also show that some of the worst excesses of the subprime binge continued well into 2006, suggesting that the pain could last through next year and beyond, especially if housing prices remain sluggish. Some borrowers may not run into trouble for years.

“We had an aggressive home-mortgage industry trying to get people into homes they couldn’t afford at a time when home prices were very high. It turned out to be a house of cards,” says Karl Case, an economics professor at Wellesley College. “We’re in the early stages of the cleanup.”

The Journal’s analysis indicates that some major subprime lenders, such as Washington Mutual Inc.’s Long Beach Mortgage unit, began scaling back or tightening their standards a year or more ago. But commercial banks and thrifts filled the void, helping to sustain real-estate markets that might otherwise have begun cooling.

The data suggest that financial suffering is likely to persist in many parts of the U.S. where subprime lending had surged. Many loans at risk of going bad have not yet done so. As much as $600 billion of adjustable-rate subprime loans, for example, are due to adjust to higher rates by the end of 2008, which means that more and more borrowers are likely to fall behind.

Last September, Darla Ball, a printer and copier saleswoman, purchased a $460,000 home in Las Vegas using an adjustable-rate subprime loan with an initial rate of 8.2%. At the time, she says, she expected to refinance before her interest rate resets to 14% next year, which will raise her monthly payments to $8,000 from $3,700. But in the past year, she says, prices of comparable homes in her subdivision have fallen to $310,000, which means she would not qualify for a new $460,000 mortgage, unless home values go back up to that level, an unlikely scenario. She says she has stopped paying her mortgage and is trying to negotiate with her lender. “I’m going to lose my home anyway,” she says, “so why pay?”

Fort Myers, Fla., is known for its boulevard lined with palm trees, bankrolled years ago by its most famous snowbird, inventor Thomas Edison. These days, the city is fast earning a reputation as an example of the deepening U.S. mortgage crisis. The area’s median sales price for existing homes is down 22% since December 2005. Foreclosures are running at an all-time high. And there is no end in sight.

Between 2004 and 2006, more than $8.5 billion in high-rate mortgages were made in the Cape Coral-Fort Myers metropolitan area. The loans encouraged borrowers to stretch more than ever, which helped inflate real-estate values. Two of every five home loans made in the area last year carried high rates, more than twice the 2004 rate.

The Journal compared the fastest-growing high-rate loan markets to the rankings compiled by foreclosure-listing providers RealtyTrac Inc. and ForeclosureS.com. In Stockton, Calif., for example, high-rate loans accounted for 33% of total home-loan volume last year, up from 13% in 2004. During the first half of this year, the Stockton area had 8,169 foreclosure filings, or one for every 27 households. According to RealtyTrac, of Irvine, Calif., that makes Stockton the nation’s foreclosure capital.

Seven of the 10 large metro areas now struggling with the highest foreclosure rates — including Miami, Detroit and Las Vegas — saw borrowers barrel into high-rate loans much faster than the country as a whole. In a forthcoming study in the Journal of the American Planning Association, Daniel Immergluck, an associate professor at Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, found a similar pattern between foreclosures occurring in early 2006 and cities with high subprime lending in 2003.

There are some less gloomy signs, too. Last year, the number of new high-rate loans fell 2% to about four million, after jumping 88% in 2005. That reflects the collapse of some of the most aggressive lenders and tightening credit standards of others. Slowing home sales have put the brakes on loan demand, and borrowers have grown more wary of mortgages with teaser rates and other gimmicks.

Yet last year’s data show that even as the housing market was weakening, some lenders still were eager to make riskier loans. Banks and thrifts grabbed 52% of the market for high-rate loans last year, up from 44% in 2005. SunTrust Banks Inc., of Atlanta, long known as a conservative lender, more than doubled the number of high-rate loans made by its mortgage unit. Smaller banks such as First National Bank of Arizona, part of First National Bank Holding Co. of Scottsdale, Ariz., also revved up their riskier mortgage lending last year.

Joel Gottesman, chairman of First National’s mortgage division, says much of the jump reflects borrowers who got second mortgages. The bank has since scaled back that business, he says. SunTrust’s increase reflects that it “was comparatively late getting into this area,” says a spokesman. He added that the jump was heightened by changes in interest rates.

Higher-income home buyers began using such loans for larger purchases. Among borrowers characterized in the data as white with annual income of at least $300,000, the number of high-rate loans jumped 74% last year, the numbers show. The average high-rate loan grew 10% to $158,000 last year, compared with a 1% rise in the average size of all home loans. The 2006 data include records from 8,886 lenders nationwide, which generate an estimated 80% of U.S. home mortgages.

The high-rate loan data likely understate the potential peril posed by mortgages with low teaser rates. Under federal rules governing disclosure, some subprime teaser loans do not show up as having high rates. Lenders weren’t required to report loan-pricing details until 2004.

The relaxation of credit standards by home lenders has been years in the making. The Community Reinvestment Act, a 1977 federal law, prodded banks to extend more credit in communities where they operated. That warmed many of them to lower-income and minority borrowers. The Federal Housing Administration, a New Deal-era mortgage insurer targeting buyers with little or poor credit, began losing market share to aggressive subprime lenders. These commercial lenders usually charged higher interest rates but promised less paperwork, faster approval and no-money-down loans that seemed more affordable to many borrowers.

Ambitious lenders such as Seattle-based Washington Mutual’s Long Beach Mortgage, which between 2004 and 2006 made $48 billion in high-rate loans, used armies of outside brokers to push subprime loans into the suburbs. (A company slogan: “The Power of Yes.”) The result was a mortgage bonanza that reached every racial and ethnic group, income level and geographic area.

By 2005, a list of subprime-lending specialists compiled by the Department of Housing and Urban Development had grown to 210 lenders, from 141 in 1996. Their combined loan volume grew tenfold during the same period.

“Old industrial cities like Philadelphia have a poverty problem, and that’s why people had to use subprime loans,” says Kevin Gillen, a research fellow at the Wharton School of University of Pennsylvania. But in pricey areas such as Miami, where the high-rate market share jumped 25 percentage points from 2004 to 2006, subprime loans didn’t have a downscale reputation. They were seen as the answer to sky-high housing costs. “They are different groups, but subprime served both of them,” Mr. Gillen says.

It used to be that high-rate borrowers weren’t allowed to stretch as much as conventional borrowers on loan amounts, a reflection of their higher credit risk. But as home prices rose throughout the U.S. in the early 2000s, lenders grew more willing to let high-rate borrowers get bigger loans as measured against their annual incomes. In 2005, borrowers who got high-rate mortgages to buy one- to four-family homes were loaned 2.1 times their reported annual income, on average, according to the data. That was 4% higher than regular borrowers.

Kristine McMahon has a six-figure income as a mortgage broker and lives in a four-bedroom home in East Hampton, N.Y., valued at more than $2.7 million. Yet Ms. McMahon, who works for Manhattan Mortgage, chose a subprime loan for herself when she refinanced last year to turn some of her home equity into cash. Ms. McMahon says that at the time of the refinancing, a conventional lender would not allow her to take out as much cash during the refinancing as her subprime lender, New Century Financial Corp., which is now operating under bankruptcy-court protection. Ms. McMahon chose a subprime loan that carried a fixed-rate of 6.45% for the first two years before turning into an adjustable rate. She plans to sell the house before the higher adjustable rates kick in.

Lenders also extended more “second-lien” mortgages — many of them “piggyback” second loans that borrowers used to cover down payments. Such second-lien loans climbed to 22% of all mortgages last year, up from 12% in 2004. Piggybacks are considered far more likely to default than a standard mortgage.

Lenders did little to discourage speculation by real-estate investors, which contributed to rising home prices. Last year, 13% of all high-rate home loans were for properties not occupied by owners, up from about 9% in 2004, the data show. Experts say such properties are higher foreclosure risks than homes lived in by their owners.

Who will be left holding the bag for mortgages that go sour? Wall Street bought lots of subprime loans and packaged them into securities for sale to investors. The data show that lenders shifted even more of their riskiest loans to investors as the boom began to fizzle.

About 63% of high-rate mortgages originated in 2004 were sold that same year, compared with 68% of all home loans, the data indicate. Last year, about 73% of new high-rate loans were sold, compared with 67% of all home loans. Last year, the average high-rate loan carried an interest rate that was 5.6 percentage points higher than a Treasury security of comparable maturity — up from 5.3 points in 2005 and 4.8 points in 2004.

In the hardest-hit areas, the numbers could batter borrowers, lenders and builders for years to come. This year, through July, the rate of mortgage-default and foreclosure-auction filings in Lee County, Fla., where Fort Myers is located, was second-highest in the U.S., according to ForeclosureS.com. The inventory of unsold homes has swelled to about 15,000, and some investors who had hoped to flip houses at a profit are walking away from sales contracts for purchases they don’t want anymore or can’t afford.

“We view Fort Myers as likely the worst housing market in the country,” J. Larry Sorsby, executive vice president and chief financial officer of Hovnanian Enterprises Inc., complained last month. In March, the Red Bank, N.J., company took a $93 million pretax charge because of the mess in Fort Myers. Last month, it slashed prices on certain homes there as part of a three-day, nationwide “Deal of the Century” sale.

Next week, foreclosure auctioneer Hudson & Marshall of Texas Inc. will try to unload about 70 houses in or near Fort Myers that were taken back by lenders. Low-ball bidders who miss out will have plenty of second chances: More than 300 other foreclosed homes in Florida are for sale in the auction.

Report: IMF chief says dollar has more room to fall

WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 (Xinhua) -- After a week of saying the dollar has fallen too far recently, International Monetary Fund (IMF) chief Rodrigo de Rato now says the dollar has more room to fall over the next several years, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.

Over the "medium term," which is three to five years in IMF parlance, "we will see room for further depreciation," Rato said Monday.

The euro, he said, is "very near" its equilibrium value.

Last week, Rato first said the dollar had fallen too far in an interview with the Financial Times. He repeated that in Madrid and in a session with The Wall Street Journal, according to the report.

He said he was referring to the decline of the dollar compared with a "weighted" average of currencies over the past several years. The dollar gained slightly against the euro after his remarks.

Rato's remarks about the dollar being undervalued could look as if he were siding with European officials who worry that the strength of the euro, compared with the dollar, is undermining European exporters, the report said.

The report also said that U.S. Treasury officials consistently say they favor a strong dollar, but they do nothing to defend the currency as it falls in value.

In effect, the U.S. government depends on a steady decline of the dollar in order to narrow the nation's current account deficit, it said.

If the deficit remains too wide, many economists worry, it could ultimately lead to a crash in the dollar.

World growth slows,credit crunch clouds outlook-IMF

By Lesley Wroughton

WASHINGTON, Oct 17 (Reuters) - The world economy is solid but will lose a step next year as growth slows in the United States and Europe, the International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday, warning that disarray in global credit markets had clouded near-term economic prospects.

The IMF maintained its previous forecast, made in July, for 2007 global economic growth of 5.2 percent, but lowered the forecast for 2008 by 0.4 percentage point to 4.8 percent.

"While underlying fundamentals supporting growth are sound and the strong momentum in increasingly important emerging markets is intact, downside risks from the financial markets and domestic demand in the United States and western Europe have increased," the IMF said in its semi-annual World Economic Outlook.

The IMF said the global expansion was now firmly led by China, whose economy is expected to grow by 11.5 percent in 2007 and slow slightly to 10 percent next year.

The IMF's largest downward revisions in its growth forecasts were in the United States and in countries affected by the troubles in the U.S. subprime mortgage market, especially Canada, Mexico and some Asian economies. It said the U.S. economy was set to grow just 1.9 percent next year, a sharp downward revision from the 2.8 percent forecast in July.

The problems in the U.S. subprime mortgage market, which has seen a wave of foreclosures, spread quickly worldwide because the loans were packaged into complex financial securities and resold to investors.

The turmoil triggered a tightening of credit conditions in August, prompting central banks around the world to respond with massive injections of liquidity to ensure the global financial system did not feeze up. The U.S. Federal Reserve cut interest rates sharply in an attempt to limit economic damage from the credit crunch and market turbulence.

U.S. RATES COULD MOVE LOWER

The IMF said signs that U.S. growth was likely to continue below trend would justify further interest rate cuts, provided inflation was contained. Meanwhile, rates should be held on hold in the euro zone rates and in Japan, where authorities should wait for clear signs of rising inflation, it added.

The IMF said its baseline forecast for global growth was based on the assumption that market liquidity would be gradually restored in the next few months and that interbank lending would revert to more normal conditions.

Still, the IMF said there was a distinct possibility that market turbulence may continue for some time, further dampening growth, particularly through the effect on housing markets in the United States and some European countries.

Countries in eastern Europe and former Soviet states with large current account deficits could be affected should capital inflows weaken, it added.

The immediate task for policy-makers was to restore market conditions and to safeguard the global expansion, the fund said, citing uncertainties over the scale of losses that investment banks were suffering because of the credit turmoil.

It said rising oil prices, which hit a record above $88 a barrel on Tuesday, were an additional risk to the global outlook, adding that further spikes in prices could not be ruled out amid limited spare production capacity.

Risks from persistent global economic imbalances -- large trade deficits in the United States and massive surpluses in China and oil-producing countries -- also weighed, although inflation worries had generally eased, the IMF said.

U.S. DOLLAR OVERVALUED

The IMF repeated its view that the U.S. dollar was overvalued, despite recent declines to record lows, and needed to depreciate further. It also said the yen was undervalued, considering medium-term fundamentals.

"In the IMF staff's view, the dollar remains overvalued relative to medium-term fundamentals," the IMF said.

It said the euro, which has recently chalked record highs against the dollar in recent weeks, continued to trade in a range broadly consistent with medium-term fundamentals.

The euro's strength has prompted anguished calls from some European politicians for U.S. action to strengthen its currency, but the IMF said the euro did not look particularly expensive.

The fund said the Canadian dollar, which also has strengthened, was in line with fundamentals, but the British pound was overvalued.

The IMF repeated that more flexibility in China's currency was needed to help unwind global financial imbalances and boost domestic consumption.

The Chinese yuan has gained a further 7.8 percent against the dollar since it was revalued by 2.1 percent in July 2005 and cut free from a dollar peg to float within tightly managed bands.

But the United States and other trade partners say the currency remains far too cheap, given China's record $1.434 trillion stockpile of foreign exchange reserves.

Paulson warns of damage to come

Ben White and Eoin Callan
Financial Times
Wednesday October 17, 2007

Hank Paulson, the US Treasury Secretary, warned on Tuesday that the downturn in the nation’s mortgage market would burden the economy “for some time” as several big banks, the largest homebuilder and a major construction equipment maker all highlighted the growing impact of the housing decline.

Mr Paulson’s grim remarks came as James Owens, CEO of Caterpillar, the equipment maker, called the current housing decline the worst since the second world war. DR Horton, the largest US homebuilder, said nearly half its orders were cancelled in the last quarter.

Taken together with discouraging bank earnings, the housing news helped push stocks lower and bond prices higher as investors worried about the possibility of a US economic slowdown.

The yield on the policy-sensitive two-year Treasury note fell 9 basis points to 4.125 per cent – the biggest drop since the Federal Reserve cut interest rates by 50 basis points on September 18. As leading bank stocks tumbled, the Dow Jones Industrial average fell 0.5 per cent to 13,912.94.

Wells Fargo, the second-biggest US mortgage lender, reported rising losses on home equity and credit card loans and saw its shares fall 4 per cent. The bank said it would cut back on the amount it allows consumers to borrow against the value of their homes, threatening a key pillar of US consumer spending and economic growth. Wells Fargo said net credit losses increased 35 per cent from last year to $892m.

Full article here.

Ex-CIA analyst says lies led to war

PAULA M. DAVIS
Kalamazoo Gazette
Wednesday October 17, 2007

A retired CIA intelligence analyst told a Western Michigan University audience Monday that deliberately fabricated intelligence pushed the United States into invading Iraq.

Ray McGovern puts blame for what he called an unnecessary war on an executive branch focused on oil and Israel, on corporate-controlled media that don't probe, and on lawmakers overly interested in their own political survival.

``The Bush regime came into office determined to have what they called regime change in Baghdad,'' McGovern said.

It's up to American citizens to agitate for change -- even to the point of pressing lawmakers to pursue impeaching the president and vice president, said McGovern, who retired after 27 years in the CIA, serving administrations from John F. Kennedy's to George H.W. Bush's.

He spoke to a seemingly sympathetic crowd Monday that included peace and anti-Iraq war activists on the opening day of Peace Week, sponsored by the Swords Into Plowshares Peace Center at WMU.

McGovern played video clips showing former Secretary of State Colin Powell and then-National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice both saying months before 9/11 occurred that Iraq posed no threat.

The former CIA analyst said he's seen his former profession ``corrupted for the purposes of deceiving our elected representatives in Congress into approving an unnecessary war. It doesn't get any worse than that.''

Last year, McGovern received national media attention for publicly challenging former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld about intelligence failures.

He has traveled around the country sharing his ideas on behalf of the Ecumenical Church of the Savior. He's also part of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity, a group of former intelligence officers from various agencies.

McGovern said citizens ``need to lean on these congressmen. ... We need to do whatever it takes, folks. As Martin Luther King said at one point, there comes a point where you have to put your bodies into it.''

Hillary! Uncensored - Banned By The Media

Google Video
Tuesday October 16, 2007

The roughcut trailer for- Hillary! Uncensored - the documentary using exclusive home videos of Hillary to expose the illegalities that elected Hillary to the Senate and the obstructions of justice that keep her there. (www.hillcap.org) and (www.peterfpaul.com) to be released on November 1, 2007 by Equal Justice Foundation of America.

House Takes Up Surveillance Bill

PAMELA HESS
AP
Wednesday October 17, 2007

Against the backdrop of a presidential veto threat, the House readied a vote on an eavesdropping bill that would expand court oversight of government electronic surveillance in the United States.

The bill, which was scheduled for a vote Wednesday, allows unfettered surveillance of foreign targets but requires special authorization if the foreign targets are likely to be in contact with people inside the United States — an effort to safeguard Americans' privacy.

Critics of the bill say the authorization, commonly referred to as a "blanket warrant," will tie up intelligence agents in red tape, impeding them from conducting urgent surveillance of terrorist suspects.

The White House threatened again on Tuesday to veto the measure unless substantive changes are made.

President Bush's central objection is the bill's lack of retroactive immunity for telecommunications companies that allegedly violated wiretapping and intelligence laws by secretly providing the government access to Americans' e-mails and phone records without court orders.

House Majority Leader Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md., has said no immunity will be granted until the White House tells Congress exactly what the telecommunications companies did that requires legal protection. The top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., joined Tuesday with the Democrats, saying he would not support a retroactive immunity provision until Congress is informed what the companies did.

Full article here.

Hillary Clinton: “We Do Not Conduct Torture”

Kurt Nimmo
TruthNews
October 16, 2007

If we are to believe Hillary Clinton, the CIA needs to send a message: the United States does not condone or conduct torture. Of course, this is little more than empty rhetoric, as the CIA will continue to conduct torture, no matter who fills the musical chair position at the White House. As Alfred W. McCoy, historian and professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, notes, the CIA has a long and sordid history of torture. “After codification in the CIA’s ‘Kubark Counterintelligence Interrogation’ manual in 1963, the new method was disseminated globally to police in Asia and Latin America through USAID’s Office of Public Safety (OPS),” writes McCoy. “Following allegations of torture by USAID’s police trainees in Brazil, the US Senate closed down OPS in 1975.”

As should be expected, the CIA does not follow orders issued by the Senate, supposedly the representative of the American people. “After OPS was abolished, the Agency continued to disseminate its torture methods through the US Army’s Mobile Training Teams, which were active in Central America during the 1980s. In 1997, the Baltimore Sun published chilling extracts of the ‘Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual’ that these Army teams had distributed to allied militaries for 20 years.”

In the ten years between the last known use of these manuals in the early 1990s and arrest of Al Queda suspects since September 2001, torture continued as a US intelligence practice by delivering suspects to allied agencies….

At home and abroad, the United States has been, for over 50 years a strong voice in the fight against torture. Simultaneously, however, the CIA’s method has become so widely accepted that US interrogators seem unaware that they are, in fact, engaged in systematic torture. From 1970 to 1988, Congress held hearings four times to expose the CIA’s use of torture. But each time, the public did not demand reform and the practice persisted.

Likewise, Hillary Clinton, once ensconced in the Oval Office, will not “demand reform” either, never mind what she tells the people who tune into The View (see video below).

It should be remembered that the CIA has a history of marching out groomed apologists to tell lies about the agency’s record of torture. “Porter Goss, the director of the Central Intelligence Agency, has made misleading statements about the CIA’s use of torture and mistreatment of detainees,” Human Rights Watch explained in November, 2005. “Goss was quoted today in USA Today stating that the CIA does not use torture and that the CIA’s interrogation techniques are legal…. ‘A growing body of evidence shows that the CIA has tortured detainees,’ said Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch. ‘Many interrogation techniques authorized for use by the CIA amount to torture. Their authorization by higher-ranking officials is illegal and potentially criminal.’”

At the time, ABC noted that the CIA has consistently employed the sort of “techniques” described in the Kubark Counterintelligence Interrogation manual in 1963, techniques supposedly discontinued. These techniques, Human Rights Watch explains, include “forced standing, sleep deprivation, and exposure to cold,” techniques that are not only “cruel, inhumane, or degrading,” but illegal under domestic and international law and “were used by Soviet and North Korean interrogators, and have been reported more recently in Egypt, Burma, Iran and Turkey.”

But if we vote for Hillary, the government will send a message to the CIA, or so Hillary insinuates.

If you believe this, I have a bridge for sale in Brooklyn.

Verizon Says It Turned Over Data Without Court Orders

Ellen Nakashima
Washington Post
October 16, 2007

Verizon Communications, the nation’s second-largest telecom company, told congressional investigators that it has provided customers’ telephone records to federal authorities in emergency cases without court orders hundreds of times since 2005.

The company said it does not determine the requests’ legality or necessity because to do so would slow efforts to save lives in criminal investigations.

In an Oct. 12 letter replying to Democratic lawmakers, Verizon offered a rare glimpse into the way telecommunications companies cooperate with government requests for information on U.S. citizens.

Verizon also disclosed that the FBI, using administrative subpoenas, sought information identifying not just a person making a call, but all the people that customer called, as well as the people those people called. Verizon does not keep data on this “two-generation community of interest” for customers, but the request highlights the broad reach of the government’s quest for data.

The disclosures, in a letter from Verizon to three Democrats on the House Energy and Commerce Committee investigating the carriers’ participation in government surveillance programs, demonstrated the willingness of telecom companies to comply with government requests for data, even, at times, without traditional legal supporting documents. The committee members also got letters from AT&T and Qwest Communications International, but those letters did not provide details on customer data given to the government. None of the three carriers gave details on any classified government surveillance program.

From January 2005 to September 2007, Verizon provided data to federal authorities on an emergency basis 720 times, it said in the letter. The records included Internet protocol addresses as well as phone data. In that period, Verizon turned over information a total of 94,000 times to federal authorities armed with a subpoena or court order, the letter said. The information was used for a range of criminal investigations, including kidnapping and child-predator cases and counter-terrorism investigations.

Verizon and AT&T said it was not their role to second-guess the legitimacy of emergency government requests.

The letters were released yesterday by the lawmakers as Congress debates whether to grant telecom carriers immunity in cases in which they are sued for disclosing customers’ phone records and other data as part of the government’s post-September 11 surveillance program, even if they did not have court authorization. House Democrats have said that they cannot contemplate such immunity without first understanding the nature of the carriers’ cooperation with the government.

“The responses from these telecommunications companies highlight the need of Congress to continue pressing the Bush administration for answers. The water is as murky as ever on this issue, and it’s past time for the administration to come clean,” said Rep. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), who launched the investigation with panel Chairman John D. Dingell (D-Mich.), and Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.).

Congressional Democrats have been largely stymied in their efforts to have the Bush administration disclose the scope and nature of its surveillance and data-gathering efforts after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Revelations have come through press reports, advocacy groups’ Freedom of Information Act lawsuits and Justice Department inspector general reports.

In May 2006, USA Today reported that the National Security Agency had been secretly collecting the phone-call records of tens of millions of Americans, using data provided by major telecom firms. Qwest, it reported, declined to participate because of fears that the program lacked legal standing.

Last month, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a privacy group in San Francisco, obtained records through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit showing that the FBI sought data from telecom companies about the calling habits of suspects and their associates, the New York Times reported. Neither Qwest nor AT&T answered the lawmakers’ question as to whether they had received such requests for information.

Yesterday’s 13-page Verizon letter indicated that the requests went further than previously known. Verizon said it had received FBI administrative subpoenas, called national security letters, requesting data that would “identify a calling circle” for subscribers’ telephone numbers, including people contacted by the people contacted by the subscriber. Verizon said it does not keep such information.

“The privacy concerns are exponential each generation you go away from the suspect’s number,” said Kurt Opsahl, senior staff attorney with the EFF. “This shows that further investigation by Congress and the inspector general is critical.”

Earlier this year, the Justice Department’s inspector general found that the FBI may have improperly obtained phone, bank and other records of thousands of people inside the United States since 2003 by using national security letters and exigent letters, or emergency demands for records.

Michael Kortan, an FBI spokesman, said the bureau has suspended use of community-of-interest data “while an appropriate oversight and approval policy” is developed. He added that the inspector general is reviewing the use of those data.

Both Verizon and AT&T suggested in their letters that they already enjoy legal immunity under existing laws. But AT&T said that when the lawsuits involve allegations of highly classified activity, the company cannot prove its immunity claims.

Carriers are facing a raft of lawsuits from individuals and privacy advocates, such as the EFF and the American Civil Liberties Union, for allegedly violating Americans’ privacy by aiding the NSA’s warrantless surveillance program.

The federal government has intervened, arguing that to continue the case would divulge “state secrets,” jeopardizing national security.

The Senate Intelligence Committee could draft a bill this week that includes relief for the carriers. The administration is seeking blanket immunity, which would extend to anyone sued for assisting the government — not just telecom carriers — in its post-Sept. 11 surveillance programs.

“It’s rare in these situations where there’s agreement between the plaintiffs and the defendants — that there are plenty of protections for telecommunications providers in the existing laws,” said the EFF’s Opsahl, adding that no new immunity is necessary. “It appears that we both agree that the court should be able to look at the full situation, despite the state-secrets privilege.”

In its letter, Verizon said that on occasion, it receives requests without correct authorizations. For instance, it said, it once received a request for stored voice mail without a warrant. The company does not respond until proper authorization is received, it said.

AT&T and Verizon both argued that the onus should not be on the companies to determine whether the government has lawfully requested customer records. To do so in emergency cases would “slow lawful efforts to protect the public,” wrote Randal S. Milch, senior vice president of legal and external affairs for Verizon Business, a subsidiary of Verizon Communications.

“Public officials, not private businessmen, must ultimately be responsible for whether the legal judgments underlying authorized surveillance activities turn out to be right or wrong — legally or politically,” wrote Wayne Watts, AT&T’s senior executive vice president and general counsel. “Telecommunications carriers have a part to play in guarding against official abuses, but it is necessarily a modest one.”

Man Tasered, Shot With Bean Bag Rounds For Filming Warrantless Police Search

Acquitted Portland man sues after cops stated camera "could be used as a weapon"

Steve Watson
Infowars.net
Wednes
day, Oct 17, 2007


A man from Portland Oregon is suing police for unlawful seizure with excessive force after officers fired a Taser and bean bag rounds at him when he refused to stop filming a warrantless search of his neighbour's property last year.

According to a report in The Oregonian, Frank Waterhouse claims that on May 27, 2006 he was brutally assaulted by police when officers followed a sniffer dog onto the property in pursuit of a fleeing suspect.

Waterhouse says that the dog keyed on a car, prompting officers to break out a window which upset residents who maintain that no one ran onto the property. It was at that point that an angry resident grabbed a video camera and started to film the police search.

The Oregonian report states:

When one woman was told to stop recording, she gave the videocamera to Waterhouse. He walked to the edge of the property, climbed up a dirt embankment and continued to record. At one point, he yelled to his friend, "Yes, I got it all on film. They had no right to come on this property."

He says in the suit that police immediately came after him, and yelled at him "put it down." Officers moved towards him, and he said, "Don't come after me." Waterhouse said seconds later he was shot with a bean bag gun and a Taser and fell to the ground.

Here is the video that Waterhouse shot. It ends with a female officer approaching him and firing taser darts into his body:

Despite the video evidence that ends with Waterhouse's painful screams, the police reports stated that Waterhouse had run away and that officers had to give chase, bean-bagging and tasering him in the process. One officer wrote, "He had refused to drop the camera which could be used as a weapon."

So police knew Waterhouse was not a suspect and that he was merely holding a camera. Is a camera an adequate match for tasers and guns?

Police arrested Waterhouse on charges of criminal trespass and disorderly conduct, which were later dismissed in court. Now Mr Waterhouse is suing the Portland Police Department.

Filming in public is a right every American citizen has under the first and fourth amendments, there is no legal basis to seize cameras and footage.

In the past we have reported on cases in which police have seized cameras and film from innocent people under bogus charges of "wiretapping". Earlier this year a man was charged in Carlisle, Pennsylvania with filming police officers during a routine traffic stop and faces up to seven years in prison. Last year a North Middleton Twp. man was charged in a street racing case that involved a wiretapping charge. Police claimed the man ordered associates to tape police breaking up an illegal race after officers told him to turn off their cameras. Furthermore, last June a 48-year-old man from Dover, New Hampshire was arrested for "wiretapping" for allegedly recording police while they were investigating him for driving while intoxicated.

Such charges are invalid because they flout privacy laws. Under the fourth amendment the expectation of privacy is not reasonable at such public places as automobile thoroughfares.

Furthermore, the expectation of privacy is not reasonable if there exists a vantage point from which anyone, not just a police officer, can see or hear what is going on.

See this previous report for more on the all out assault by police and city authorities on the right to film in public.

The Oregonian also reports that Waterhouse's case is one of four similar incidents of "dirty tactics" on behalf of the police which are being heard this week.

The Portland Police Bureau have refused to comment on any of the cases.