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Feb 27, 2012

Breaking News: CBS News: Fire aboard Costa liner leaves cruise ship adrift

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Fire aboard Costa liner leaves cruise ship adrift
Feb 27th 2012, 16:25

No casualties reported among the passengers or crew, however engine trouble strands ship off the Seychelles in the Indian Ocean

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Breaking News: CBS News: Oscars 2012 fashion: Best and worst dressed stars

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Oscars 2012 fashion: Best and worst dressed stars
Feb 27th 2012, 06:38

Celebrity stylist Felix Mercado lists the best and worst dressed stars on the Academy Awards red carpet

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Breaking News: CBS News: Syrian regime slapped with new EU sanctions

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Syrian regime slapped with new EU sanctions
Feb 27th 2012, 13:47

European gov'ts increase pressure on Assad regime to stop crackdown by freezing officials' assets, restricting central bank

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Breaking News: CBS News: Crystal criticized for blackface at Oscars

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Crystal criticized for blackface at Oscars
Feb 27th 2012, 15:52

Comedian's impersonation of Sammy Davis Jr. draws some sour notes on Twitter

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U.S. News: Official: 5 hurt in Ohio high school shooting

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thumbnail Official: 5 hurt in Ohio high school shooting
Feb 27th 2012, 13:54

At least four students were injured in a shooting Monday morning at Chardon High School in Chardon, Ohio, according to Cleveland television station WKYC. Authorities say the alleged gunman is in custody. NBC's Chris Jansing reports.

By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

Updated 10:45 a.m. ET: At least five students were injured in a shooting Monday morning at Chardon High School in Chardon, Ohio, sheriff spokesman John Hiscox said. The alleged gunman is in custody, according to Hiscox.

Officials said victims were found in three different places inside the school. 

The gunman was pushed out of the building by a teacher and was caught later some distance away from the school, officials said.

Police said the gunman used a handgun.

Some students told Fox 8 News they saw two gunmen.

"I'm just distraught," Victoria, a Chardon student, told Fox 8. She said the cafeteria wasn't crowded at the time of the shooting, adding that she knew the shooter, who is a junior.  Victoria said she saw him shoot another student in the back before she and a friend fled the area.

 “He was not like a jock, a popular kid," student Evan Erasmus told Channel 5. “He has friends, but he would be considered the outcast type."

Erasmus told Channel 5 that a student tweeted he was going to bring a gun to school but no one took him seriously.

“I am still in shock,” Jonathan Sylak, a senior at the high school, told MSNBC TV.

 Asked about the connection of the alleged shooter and the victims, Sylak said “I don’t think it was random.”

“They were definitely targeted, I think,” he said.

 He said he knows the shooter.

According to WKBN.com, police scanner traffic is reporting three victims are in critical condition. Medical helicopters converged on the Wal-Mart in Chardon, where a landing zone had been set up.

Three victims have been transported to MetroHealth Medical Center and two to Hillcrest Hospital, according to the News-Herald.

The Cleveland Plain Dealer reported the shooting began in the cafeteria, according to a waiting parent, Jessica Bryant, whose daughter had seen it and sent her a text message.

Another parent, Jeannette Roth, said her son told her the shooting happened while students were eating breakfast and waiting for first period. She told the paper a student "stood up and started shooting, and then it was chaos." Nearly 1,100 students attend Chardon High School.

Students fled and locked themselves in classrooms for safety.

“These kids are knowledgeable about guns because they hunt,” Laurie Hovater, a reporter for WTAM Radio, told MSNBC TV.

Civil deputy Erin Knife, of the Geauga County Sheriff's Office, says the shooting was reported around 7:30 a.m.

Schools in the area are locked down.

The school system has received an excellent rating from the Ohio Department of Education for 10 consecutive years.

Chardon is located about 30 miles east of Cleveland in Geauga County and is a city of about 5,100 residents.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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U.S. News: BP spill trial postponed as settlement talks make progress

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thumbnail BP spill trial postponed as settlement talks make progress
Feb 27th 2012, 15:48

U.S. Coast Guard via AP

Fire boat response crews spray water on the burning remnants of BP's Deepwater Horizon offshore oil rig on April 21, 2010.

By msnbc.com staff and news services

BP and lawyers for tens of thousands of businesses and individuals hit by the 2010 gulf oil spill were trying to work out a settlement on Monday after a judge delayed the start of the trial by a week.

Citing three people familiar with the talks, Bloomberg news agency reported Monday that BP and the plaintiffs were discussing a $14 billion settlement.


"I had almost given up on the possibility of a global settlement before a trial began," Edward Sherman, a professor at Tulane University Law School and specialist in complex litigation, said Sunday. "Now, with an extra week, it seems to improve the chances."

A settlement could also be a key step toward BP reaching a broader settlement with its drilling partners, and with federal and state governments.

During a conference call between BP and a plaintiffs steering committee on Sunday, U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier cited "some progress" in settlement talks, two people close to the case told The Associated Press.

BP and the committee in a joint news release said they were working to reach an agreement that would "fairly compensate people and businesses affected by the Deepwater Horizon accident and oil spill."

The massive scope of the case — a maze of claims and counterclaims between the companies, federal and state governments and plaintiffs' attorneys — has elicited comparisons to the tobacco litigation of the 1990s.

Democratic strategist David Goodfriend argues the Justice Department should take a tough stand against BP even if businesses and individuals reach a settlement.

Mountains of legal briefs
Roughly 340 plaintiffs' lawyers have worked on the case. BP has spent millions of dollars on experts and law firms. More than 300 depositions have been taken. Millions of pages of legal briefs have been filed. One Justice Department lawyer said it would take him 210 years to read all the pages submitted into the record if he read 1,000 pages a day.

Bloomberg's sources said under the proposed settlement BP would close its $20 billion Gulf Coast Claims Facility and shift the facility's remaining $14 billion to the plaintiffs.

The steering committee is overseeing lawsuits filed by individuals and businesses following the explosion on the Deepwater Horizon rig on April 20, 2010, in the Gulf of Mexico. The blast killed 11 workers and injured 17, and led to 206 million gallons of oil spewing from the blown-out well, soiling miles of coastline.

Even with a settlement, much work would remain:

  • The U.S. government has sued BP and others for violating the Clean Water Act and other laws, which could result in fines totaling tens of billions of dollars.
  • Gulf states are also seeking compensation for their losses.
  • BP is also suing and being sued by its drilling partners.

Apart from BP, which owned 65 percent of the Macondo well, the main corporate defendants are Transocean, which owned the Deepwater Horizon rig, and Halliburton, which provided cementing services for the well. Several other companies are also involved in the trial.

BP has accepted responsibility for the disaster, and estimated its legal and cleanup costs for the spill will total $43 billion. Some analysts have said that figure could top $60 billion, especially if there were a finding that its activities at the project were "grossly negligent."

Earlier this month, BP said it had set aside $6.1 billion to cover claims by businesses. Lawyers for those plaintiffs said the amount was too low, and that BP should also award punitive damages, which the oil company says are not warranted.

Many industry analysts and experts say a quick settlement is in BP's best interest. 

If no settlement is reached, Barbier will preside over a three-phase, non-jury trial that could last the better part of a year. The first phase is designed to identify the causes of the deadly blowout and to assign percentages of fault to the companies involved in the ill-fated drilling project.

Financial analysts estimate BP could wind up paying anywhere from $15 billion to $30 billion over the lawsuits.

An AP analysis found that the company could conceivably face up to $52 billion in environmental fines and compensation if the judge determines the company was grossly negligent.

The decisions and actions that led to the explosion and spill already have been painstakingly investigated by the Coast Guard, federal regulators and a presidential commission. Their probes concluded that BP, Transocean and Halliburton deserve to share the blame for a string of risky decisions that were designed to save time and money.

Separately, BP has had discussions in recent days with the federal government and cement contractor Halliburton, according to several people close to the case.

Families of crew who died have other needs
Relatives of the 11 killed in the Deepwater Horizon blast say they are hoping for something more elusive: justice for lost loved ones.

Sheryl Revette, whose husband, Dewey, worked for Transocean and was among the 11 killed, doesn't have anything to gain financially from the trial. She wants an apology from the oil giant, something she said she hasn't received yet, even though she settled her claims against BP last year.

"I've never heard a word from them," said Revette, 48, of State Line, Miss. "But an apology isn't going to bring my husband back."

From the beginning of the disaster, many relatives of workers who died on the rig have felt that their tragic losses were unjustly overshadowed by corporate finger-pointing, legal wrangling, and concerns about the spill's environmental and economic impact along the Gulf Coast.

"Nobody cares about the 11 men who died," said Arleen Weise, 58, of Yorktown, Texas, whose 24-year-old son, Adam Weise, was killed in the blast. "Did everybody have to forget about those men?"

A BP spokesman said the company has expressed its sympathies to the victims' families from the outset. In a press release less than a week after the explosion, former BP CEO Tony Hayward said: "We owe a lot to everyone who works on offshore facilities around the world and no words can express the sorrow and pain when such a tragic incident happens."

Chris Jones, whose brother, Gordon, was also killed on the rig, had planned to drive in from Baton Rouge with other relatives to attend the start of the trial. He said he has mixed feelings about the prospect of a settlement that would eliminate the need for a trial. Jones said he would be disappointed if BP manages to "write a check to solve their problems."

"I was ready to go to trial and see their feet held close to the fire," he said Sunday after learning of the postponement. "It seems like the easy way out to pay whatever the plaintiffs are willing to take."

Jones, an attorney, said he's not surprised that the oil giant would seek to avoid a long, costly trial.

"I know that is part of the game, so to speak," he said. "As long as they're paying a lot of money for the damage they caused, it would give me some relief."

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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Philly.com News: Phila. police shoot knife-wielding man

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Phila. police shoot knife-wielding man
Feb 27th 2012, 15:25

Investigators are trying to identify a man who was shot and critically wounded by police when he lunged at an officer with knife in Philadelphia's Fishtown section.

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Philly.com News: Judge: Won’t dismiss charges against Msgr. Lynn

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Judge: Won’t dismiss charges against Msgr. Lynn
Feb 27th 2012, 15:30

A judge today said the discovery of Cardinal Anthony J. Bevilacqua's 1994 order to shred memos about dozens of Philadelphia-area priests suspecting of molesting children is no reason to halt the upcoming conspiracy trial of one of his key aides.

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Top Stories - Google News: Costa Concordia's sister ship 'adrift off Seychelles after fire' - Telegraph.co.uk

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Top Stories - Google News
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Costa Concordia's sister ship 'adrift off Seychelles after fire' - Telegraph.co.uk
Feb 27th 2012, 15:30


Telegraph.co.uk

Costa Concordia's sister ship 'adrift off Seychelles after fire'
Telegraph.co.uk
A cruise ship with more than 1000 passengers and crew on board is adrift in the Indian Ocean after a fire broke out in its electrical room. By Nick Squires, Rome The Costa Allegra is owned by the same company that operated the Costa Concordia, ...
Cruise ship Costa Allegra adrift off SeychellesBBC News
Costa Concordia sister ship adrift in Indian Ocean after fire on boardMirror.co.uk
Costa Concordia cousin Allegra adrift off Seychelles near Alphonse Island ...National Post
Washington Post -The Independent
all 212 news articles »

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post: Measuring the performance of the financial ‘netherworld’

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post
Economy News: Get the latest headlines and in-depth coverage of economic news, policy, analysis and more from The Washington Post.
Measuring the performance of the financial 'netherworld'
Feb 27th 2012, 15:08

Rob Cox and Daniel Indiviglio have created what they call the "Cordray Index" to measure the impact of new regulations on the "netherworld of the money industry"--the payday lenders, pawnshops, and others besides banks that are under new scrutiny from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post: ‘Most patent cases don’t even allege copying’

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post
Economy News: Get the latest headlines and in-depth coverage of economic news, policy, analysis and more from The Washington Post.
'Most patent cases don't even allege copying'
Feb 27th 2012, 15:33

When you think of patent infringement, you probably think of a form of theft: Kelly invents a waterproof telephone and Tom sees her invention and copies it to make a quick buck. But Alex Tabarrok says it's more common for theft to be entirely absent. Kelly and Pat both invent the waterproof telephone, but Tom gets to the patent office first and sues Sally if she tries to sell her invention.

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post: Featured Advertiser

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post
Economy News: Get the latest headlines and in-depth coverage of economic news, policy, analysis and more from The Washington Post.
Featured Advertiser
Feb 27th 2012, 15:33

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Philly.com News: Maid in the Shade

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Maid in the Shade
Feb 27th 2012, 14:48

"THE ARTIST" won Best Picture last night, making history as the first silent movie to win an Academy Award since 1929.

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Breaking News: CBS News: Cruise ship passengers robbed in Mexico

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Cruise ship passengers robbed in Mexico
Feb 27th 2012, 13:00

Masked gunmen mug day-tripping Carnival Splendor passengers hiking on a nature trail

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