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Oil rises amid US chill, Iran tensions
International |
2007/02/26 17:01
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Oil rose on Monday as a burst of cold weather boosted heating demand in the United States and as world powers discussed tightening UN sanctions on Iran, the world's fourth-largest oil exporter. US crude rose 26 cents to $US61.40 a barrel, just below the 2007 high of $US61.80 hit on Friday. London Brent was up 47 cents to $US61.35. Analysts said wintry weather sweeping across the key Midwest and North-east heating markets was supporting oil's gains, and added that prices could find even more strength heading into the spring, when gasoline demand picks up. "It is the first time this year that the large speculative funds are showing a net long position in crude oil," said Olivier Jakob, an analyst at Swiss-based Petromatrix. Oil prices have swung between a high of $US78.40 last July, when fighting flared in Lebanon, and a 20-month low of $US49.90 in January, when an expected influx of fund money failed to materialise, disappointing oil investors. A steady recovery in prices since late January has been supported by gradually tightening supplies - OPEC has twice cut output since November - and by concerns over a possible disruption of Iran's oil supplies. |
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Supreme Court hears arguments in deadly force
Law Center |
2007/02/26 11:03
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The US Supreme Court heard oral arguments Monday in Scott v. Harris, 05-1631, where the court must decide whether a police officer violated a fleeing suspect's constitutional rights by using deadly force when he bumped his police car into the suspect's car to end a high speed chase. Victor Harris was pursued by Coweta County, Georgia police when he refused to pull over while speeding. Video taken from the dashboard of the police car showed the ensuing collision, which resulted in Harris' paralysis and eventual suit against former sheriff's deputy Timothy Smith for violation of the Fourth Amendment. The US Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that Scott's qualified immunity claim under the Fourth Amendment was an insufficient defense because he acted unreasonably. The accident video was not played in court, but at least half of the bench appeared to have seen the footage; Justices Breyer and Kennedy each implied the video evidenced that contrary to the appeals court holding Harris was driving erratically. The Court is expected to rule by July. |
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Painkillers linked to greater risk of heart attacks
Health Care |
2007/02/26 11:00
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Regular use of painkillers such as aspirin, ibuprofen and paracetamol is linked to greater risk of stroke and heart attack from higher blood pressure, research published today shows. A wide-ranging US study has found that men who took paracetamol, aspirin or ibuprofen six or seven days a week over a two-year period were a third more likely to be diagnosed with high blood pressure than men who did not use them. Researchers, led by Dr John Forman of the Brigham and Women's hospital in Boston, studied 16,000 men whose records they checked over a four-year period. Those who took 15 or more pills per week were 48% more likely to have high blood pressure. The findings, published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, reiterate a 2002 study which found that commonly-used painkillers raise blood pressure in women.
More than five million Britons, including those suffering back pain, migraine or osteroarthritis take painkillers. The US research found that those who took paracetamol six or seven days a week were 34% more likely to be diagnosed with high blood pressure, and being overweight reduced this risk. Those who took aspirin as regularly were 26% more likely to have high blood pressure. For painkillers such as ibuprofen and naproxen, the risk increased by 38%. Being overweight increased this risk. Dr Elliott Antman, from the American Heart Association: said: "We advise physicians to start with nonpharmacologic treatments such as physical therapy and exercise, weight loss to reduce stress on joints, and heat or cold therapy," he said. Dr Gary Curhan, who also worked on the study, said men who were advised by a doctor to take an aspirin a day to reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke should continue to take them. "The benefit outweighs the risk," he said. |
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High-Speed Chase Reaches Supreme Court
Court Watch |
2007/02/26 10:36
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The Supreme Court finds itself smack in the middle of a big debate over high-speed chases. Officers in Georgia were chasing a speeding Victor Harris in 2001 when a cruiser rammed Harris' Cadillac at roughly 90 miles-per-hour, sending him into an embankment and leaving him paralyzed. Harris sued Deputy Timothy Scott for violating his civil rights by using excessive force. Scott said he was trying to end the chase before anybody got hurt. Two lower courts sided with Harris. This will be the first time in more than 20 years that the high court considers constitutional limits on police use of deadly force to stop fleeing suspects. Harris' lawyer argues something more serious than a traffic violation has to occur before such force is used. Scott's attorney counters he didn't use excessive force, and that Harris was driving recklessly.
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Troutman Sanders LLP to have office in China
Law Firm News |
2007/02/26 09:56
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Troutman Sanders LLP reported Monday it will open an office in Shanghai, making it the only Atlanta-based law firm with an office in mainland China, the world's fastest-growing economy.
The opening of the Shanghai office continues Troutman Sanders' expansion in the Pacific Rim, where the law firm operates a Hong Kong office that opened in 1997. Combined, the two offices will employ about 40 people.
"China's economy is booming, and many of our global clients are working in or planning to expand into this growing region," said Robert W. Webb Jr., chairman and managing partner of Troutman Sanders, during a press conference at the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce. He said the expansion will help clients in the Asia-Pacific region, who need legal assistance with mergers and acquisitions, foreign direct investment, private equity and venture capital, corporate law. Webb joined Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin last fall on the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce's trade mission to China. "The opening of a Troutman Sanders office in Shanghai is an important step in Atlanta's ongoing efforts to strengthen business ties with China," Franklin said. "It is a great example of what can be accomplished when local business leaders work together to tell Atlanta's story, as they did during the September trip to China. We will continue that cooperation as we work to expand Atlanta's global reach." http://www.troutmansanders.com |
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Egypt cleric claims CIA torture in 2003 rendition from Italy
International |
2007/02/25 21:02
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Egyptian cleric Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr said in a live television interview with Al Jazeera Sunday that he was "savagely tortured by the CIA when kidnapped" and taken from Milan to Egypt in 2003. Nasr, who has been at the heart of Italian judicial proceedings against US and Italian intelligence agents implicated in his alleged kidnapping, did not say in the interview whether he was tortured during his four years of Egyptian imprisonment, although he alleged that previously. He also personally revealed plans previously disclosed by his lawyer to sue former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi [JURIST news archive] for his participation in the abduction, as well as plans to seek monetary compensation from the US for his suffering. Nasr was released from prison earlier this month. The US State Department has refused to comment on his case. |
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World court finds Serbia innocent of genocide charge
International |
2007/02/25 20:58
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SERBIA did not commit genocide against Bosnia during the 1992-5 war, the United Nation's highest court has ruled in a landmark case - but it said that the country had violated its responsibility to prevent genocide. Bosnia had asked the International Court of Justice (ICJ), based in The Hague, to rule on whether Serbia had committed genocide through the killing, rapes and ethnic cleansing that overtook Bosnia during the war. It was the first time a sovereign state had been tried for genocide, outlawed in a UN convention in 1948 after the Nazi Holocaust of the Jews. A judgment in Bosnia's favour could have allowed the country to seek billions of pounds of compensation from Serbia. Judge Rosalyn Higgins, the ICJ president, said the court concluded that the 1995 Srebrenica massacre of thousands of Bosnian Muslim men and boys did constitute genocide, but that other mass killings of Bosnian Muslims did not. But she said the court ruled that the Serbian state could not be held directly responsible for genocide, so paying reparations to Bosnia would be inappropriate even though Serbia had failed to prevent genocide and punish the perpetrators. "The court finds by 13 votes to two that Serbia has not committed genocide," she said. "The court finds that Serbia has violated the obligation to prevent genocide ... in respect of the genocide that occurred in Srebrenica." Some 8,000 Muslims from Srebrenica and surrounding villages in eastern Bosnia were killed in July 1995. The bodies of almost half of them have been found in more than 80 mass graves nearby. Radovan Karadzic, the Bosnian Serb wartime leader and his military commander, Ratko Mladic, both accused of genocide over Srebrenica, are still on the run. Reacting to the ruling in Belgrade, the Serbian president, Boris Tadic, urged the country's parliament to condemn the massacre. "For all of us, the very difficult part of the verdict is that Serbia did not do all it could to prevent genocide," he told a news conference. |
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