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Friday, August 31, 2007

FBI Top Ten Stories of the Week August 23-30 2007

FBI'S Top Ten News Stories
For the Week Ending August 31, 2007

1.         FBI Headquarters: Protecting Your Business Against Bomb Threats

As the result of several financial and commercial institutions throughout the U.S. receiving extortion bomb threats, the FBI has launched a public campaign on how to respond to a potential bomb threat. Full Story
 

2.         San Antonio: Flip-for-Profit Scheme Ends in Guilty Plea

Firooz Deljavan, former owner and operator of Austin Realtors Network Inc., pleaded guilty to participating in a fraud and money laundering scheme that defrauded federally insured financial institutions and mortgage lenders of more than $15 million. His wife, Rosemary Rios, pleaded guilty to one count of making false statements in obtaining a real estate loan. Nineteen other individuals have been convicted and sentenced for their roles in this scheme while two remain as fugitives. Full Story

3.         Houston: Former Jefferson County Assistant District Attorney Sentenced

A former Jefferson County District Attorney, Wendell "Chip" Radford, Jr., received a 10-month sentence and was ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $393,433.53 for his role in a complex mail fraud scheme. Radford was employed by the Jefferson County District Attorney's Office at the time of his criminal activity. Full Story

4.         New York: U.S. Army Captain Arrested for Accepting $50,000 Bribe

U.S. Army Captain Austin Key was arrested and charged with accepting a $50,000 bribe to steer military contracts in Iraq. This case was investigated by the National Procurement Fraud Task Force which was formed to promote the early detection, identification, prevention, and prosecution of procurement fraud. Full Story

5.         Miami: Former Chairman of the Board Sentenced in Bank Fraud

Eduardo Orlansky, former chairman of the board of E.S. Bankest, was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment for bank fraud, wire fraud, money laundering, and conspiracy and to make restitution in the amount of $164,597,310.11.  Nine people were criminally charged in this case which involved a loss in the amount of $164 million. Full Story

6.         Portland: Four Sentenced in Massive Ponzi Scheme

Robert J. Skirving, Laurent Barnabe, Douglas Ferguson, and Rita Regale were sentenced for their involvement in promoting a $170 million fraudulent investment scheme.  Evidence from around the world was hunted down during the eight-year investigation. Full Story

7.         Minneapolis: Military Officer Arrested on Attempted Kidnapping Charges

A suspicious-looking man at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, later identified as Timothy J. Pentaleri, was approached by law enforcement officers.  Pentaleri, a reserve military officer, had various weapons in his pockets.  Information on his intended victim and condoms were found in his SUV along with items used for restraint. Full Story

8.         San Antonio: Former Deputy Sheriff Indicted on Extortion Charges

Following receipt of several citizen complaints, an FBI undercover operation was initiated, involving agents posing as Mexican nationals traveling alone. Upon being stopped for an alleged traffic violation by Henry James, Jr., the agents would be told to pay a cash fine ranging from $120 to $300. James was indicted for extorting money while performing his official duties as a Deputy Sheriff for La Salle County. Full Story

9.         Detroit: Doctor, Police Officer and Others Charged With Illegal Distribution of Prescription Drugs

Paul Emerson, D.O., David Dewitt (a police officer with the Flat Rock Police Department), and four other Detroit men were charged with illegal distribution of highly addictive prescription drugs. Two patients of Emerson died as a result of receiving these prescription drugs. Emerson also allowed non-medical personnel to write prescriptions for controlled substances. Full Story

10.       Tampa: Two Students Indicted for Transporting Explosives

Two University of South Florida students were indicted by a federal grand jury in Tampa, Florida, for transporting explosives materials without permits. The two-count indictment charges Ahmed Abdellatif Sherif Mohamed and Youssef Samir Megahed, both Egyptian nationals, with transporting explosives in interstate commerce without permits on or about Aug. 4, 2007 in the Middle District of Florida and elsewhere. Full Story



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Inside the Terrorist Screening Center

Keeping Watch
Inside the Terrorist Screening Center
wo days before the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon in 2001, a Maryland State Trooper stopped Ziad Jarrah for speeding near the Delaware state line. The trooper checked Jarrah's license and registration against a database of "wants and warrants," and it came back clean. The trooper later called the stop routine. He had no way of knowing that Jarrah was on a CIA watch list and that he was central to an unfolding plot to attack the U.S.

Fast forward to today: if Jarrah was stopped for speeding, a query of his information in the FBI's National Crime Information Center (NCIC) would automatically check him against a master list of known or appropriately suspected terrorists. The presence of Jarrah's name would raise a flag, and the trooper would be prompted to call the Terrorist Screening Center (TSC), where analysts would run more extensive checks to see if the Jarrah at the traffic stop is the same one of interest to the intelligence community. The screening center might guide the trooper through some questions to ask Jarrah or contact its operational unit to coordinate a response, such as dispatching agents from the Joint Terrorism Task Force to the scene.

The difference today: Jarrah wouldn't fall through the cracks.

"The weakness pre-9/11 was an inability to share information about suspected terrorists," said Leonard Boyle, director of the Terrorist Screening Center, which was created in 2003 to mesh and manage a dozen disparate watch lists of known or appropriately suspected terrorists. "What the TSC is doing is expanding significantly our ability to keep people out of the country who intend to do us harm and keep track of people in the country who want to do us harm."

In addition to traffic stops, names are checked against the list at all border crossings and international flights into the U.S.—the No-Fly list administered by the Department of Homeland Security is fed by the TSC.

The FBI-administered TSC is staffed by liaisons from across the federal counterterrorism community and operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The screening center, housed in a nondescript building in Northern Virginia, receives hundreds of calls a week, many from municipal police running checks at traffic stops.

Positive encounters—those where there's a match—don't necessarily end in arrest. In fact, presence on the TSC list does not, in and of itself, warrant arrest. Instead, police gather as much information as they can and often send drivers on their way, adding another critical piece to the larger intelligence puzzle.

"It's not about making arrests," said Michael Ross, a watch commander at the TSC. "It's about connecting the dots and closing the loops."

The dots literally appear on a large screen in the hub of the cloistered screening center, where encounters are color coded on a map of the U.S., one of the many ways they can spot trends and track potential threats.

Records on the TSC's master list are constantly added, modified, and deleted—purging names with no nexus to terrorism is a priority since they may distract from the serious threats.

"The last thing we want is law enforcement wasting their time on someone who's not a threat," TSC Director Boyle said. "We have a real interest in getting people off the list when information no longer suggests they should be there. We remove names every day."

Similarities in names and spellings occasionally cause delays for individuals flagged during encounters. Those who were unduly delayed can file an action with the agency involved. If it's related to the screening center's watch list, the TSC has staff dedicated solely to resolving their complaints and trying to minimize future inconveniences. They will review a case and reach out to the agency that added the individual, then make a fresh call as to what that person's status should be.

"It's not 'Let's see how many names we can jam on the list,'" said Ross. "We're very, very serious about trying to keep the list as tight as possible."

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Thursday, August 30, 2007

Taney County Health Department Norovirus “Train-the-Trainer” Seminar

An informational seminar is being offered to a businesses, agencies, and faith-based organizations to help increase awareness regarding Norovirus and how it affects our community on Wednesday September 5, 2007 from 10am to 12pm at the Grand Country Music Hall.

 

Topics that will be reviewed include:

·         Recent Norovirus activity in the area and across the United States.

·         Procedures for proper cleaning.

·         Cleaning products for effective disinfecting.

·         Products for disinfecting large areas such as hotel rooms and buses. 

·         Reporting procedures for notifying local public health agencies.

·         The importance of a community-wide strategy and the Public Health Alert System.

 

Please RSVP today by contacting the Taney County Health Department at 334-4544 or the City of Branson Health Department at 337-8551.

 

Plan to have a representative from your business, agency, or faith-based organization attend at this important seminar. Together we can help protect our community and the millions of guests who visit annually. 



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Missouri Price Index 1997-2006

Missouri Consumer Price Index


April, 2006 3.5%
April, 2005 3.5%
April, 2004 2.3%
April, 2003 2.2%
April, 2002 1.6%
April, 2001 3.3%
April, 2000 3.3%
April, 1999 2.3%
April, 1998 1.4%
April, 1997 2.5%

The table above summarizes the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers
(CPI) as certified by the Missouri State Tax Commission for the years listed.
Twelve Months Ending Change in the Consumer Price Index

Pursuant to Section 137.073.4(1), RSMO, "…the state tax commission shall
certify each year to each county clerk the increase in the general price level as
measured by the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers for the United
States, or its successor publications, as defined and officially reported by the
United States Department of Labor, or its successor agency. The state tax
commission shall certify the increase in such index on the latest twelve-month
basis available on June first of each year over the immediately preceding prior
twelve-month period in order that political subdivisions shall have this information
available
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Protecting Your Business Against Extortion Bomb Threats


Protecting Your Business Against Extortion Bomb Threats

Several financial and commercial institutions throughout the United States have received extortion telephone calls threatening to blow up their organization unless a large sum of money was wired to an overseas bank account.  Criminal intelligence analysts are sifting through local police reports to identify similarities in the threats.  In addition, the FBI has launched a public campaign on how to respond to a potential bomb threat. 

“The FBI, in close cooperation with our federal, state, and local law enforcement partners, is working to identify those responsible and bring them to justice,” said Assistant Director Kenneth W. Kaiser, FBI Criminal Investigative Division.  “These are serious criminal offenses and the FBI needs the public assistance and information related to potential bomb threats.” 

We recognize these threats may be alarming to the public and suggest the following steps and questions be asked when responding to a potential phone-in bomb threat:

1. Questions to ask the caller:
- When is the bomb going to explode?
- Where is the bomb located right now?
- What does it look like?
- What kind of bomb is it?
- What will cause it to explode?
- Did you place the bomb?
- Why?
- What is your address?
- What is your name?
- What is your phone number?

2. Document the EXACT wording of the threat and caller’s response.

3. Apparent gender, race, and age of the caller.

4. Characteristics of the caller’s voice (calm, angry, excited, accent, etc.)

5. Background sounds (street noises, static on the line, etc.)

6. Threat Language (well spoken, incoherent, taped, irrational)

7. If you have Caller ID, please record the phone number, if possible.

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Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Blunt's Historic Higher Education Plan for Missouri Students, Families Takes Effect Todaybsra


            JEFFERSON CITY – Gov. Matt Blunt's historic higher education plan for Missouri students and families took effect today.  The plan increases funding for student scholarships, introduces accountability measures, provides tuition stabilization and includes the landmark Lewis and Clark Discovery Initiative, which provides $335 million for new state-of-the-art learning centers for Missouri students.

             "The critical investments Missouri is making today will ensure that our students preparing to be tomorrow's leaders have the tools they need to meet the challenges of the global economy," Gov. Blunt said. "This legislation will put higher education in reach for more Missouri students and families than ever before.  Significant improvements such as increased funding for Missouri 's colleges and universities, tuition stabilization measures and added scholarships will open the door to higher education for thousands of students and families across the state."             

            The legislation creates the Access Missouri Scholarship that more than doubles funding for needs based scholarships, increasing the funding available statewide from $27.5 million to $72.5 million and making them more available to thousands of Missouri families. The legislation also enacts the governor's landmark Lewis & Clark Discovery Initiative.  

            The governor's Lewis & Clark Discovery Initiative is a partnership between the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority (MOHELA) and the state that sells loans held by students in other states generating $335 million to strengthen Missouri's colleges and universities. The initiative will provide much needed funding for state-of-the-art learning and research centers to prepare students to compete in today's global economy where higher quality learning in areas such as math and science are crucial elements for students' future success.

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Missouri State Archives Website Named One of Nation's Best for Family History

Press Release: Robin Carnahan

Jefferson City, Missouri - Secretary of State Robin Carnahan announced today that the Missouri State Archives website has been recognized as one of the nation's finest resources for family history research. The list of the 101 best websites was compiled by Family Tree Magazine, America's largest-circulation genealogy magazine.

The Archives website received almost 28.5 million web searches in the past year. Some of its most popular databases include:

  • The Missouri Death Certificate Database, which has a searchable index of all death records from 1910-1956, along with images of many of the original documents;

  • The Soldiers Database, with individual service cards from the War of 1812 to World War I;

  • The Naturalization Records Index, that includes naturalization records from 1816-1955;

  • The St. Louis Probate Court Digitization Project, with probate court records from 1802-1900.

"Knowing that the resources we place online are helping Missourians and people from across the nation to unlock their past is rewarding," said Carnahan. "We are honored to be chosen as one of the most valuable websites in the country and will continue to make more of the heritage of Missourians easily available through the Internet."

This is the fifth year the Missouri State Archives has been recognized by Family Tree Magazine, having been named every year since 2003. The Archives is listed in the category of significant state and regional resources.

The award-winning Missouri State Archives website is available at www.sos.mo.gov/archives, and for a list of the 101 best family history websites go to: www.familytreemagazine.com/101sites/2007.



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Blunt Directive Safeguards Tax Dollars from Illegal Workers

O'FALLON – Gov. Matt Blunt today took decisive action to prevent taxpayers' money from supporting illegal immigration as he outlined tough new initiatives to ensure state-supported building projects are not employing illegal workers.

            "Missourians have a right to know that their tax dollars are spent with care and not funding illegal immigration," Gov. Blunt said.  "I am enacting new directives to help ensure that whenever tax credits are awarded Missourians can be confident the projects are not funding illegal workers or promoting illegal activity." 

          "I am excited that Governor Blunt has stepped up to address this growing problem when many other governors buried their head in the sand.  This is the second time that the illegal workers issues have arisen on state subsidized projects in our area.  Missouri taxpayers deserve and demand better.  Governor Blunt is taking this issue head on and is representing the beliefs and concerns of all of Missouri with his actions to crack down on illegal immigration," Sen. Scott Rupp said.

            In recent news, a development in O'Fallon is facing allegations of using illegal immigrants. The project is funded in part by tax credits issued by the Missouri Housing Development Commission.  The commission is continuing an investigation into the allegation of illegal activity.

            All Missouri Department of Economic Development tax credit programs currently mandate applicants meet strict employment verification requirements.  In addition to these requirements, the governor today directed the department to:

  • Conduct random on-site inspections of all projects accompanied by the tax credit recipient to monitor and retrieve documentation regarding the legal status of all workers on the job. The inspections will include direct employees of the tax credit recipient, contracted or subcontracted agents and both general contractors and their subcontractors.
  • Perform a Compliance By Written Demand action for all tax credit recipients that requires all workers' proof of legal status including contractors and subcontractors to be submitted within 30 days of the date of the receipt of the written request.

            If the state uncovers illegal workers the first step will be to work through ICE and authorized state law enforcement to take appropriate action.  Next, tax credits recipients may be subject to action by law and policy, including the five year ban from accessing any state programs as provided under current law.

            Today's announcement is part of a tough new strategy Blunt designed to fight illegal immigration and activity in Missouri. 

          Earlier this week he announced directives that will help enforce the laws against illegal immigration. Under the governor's leadership all state law enforcement agencies will immediately take the meticulous steps necessary to verify the immigration status of every criminal who state law enforcement officials present for incarceration. In addition the governor is finalizing an agreement with federal officials that will essentially deputize state troopers, Capitol Police, and water patrol officers to enforce federal laws and protect against illegal immigration.  Missouri will be one of only seven states to have taken this important step to empower state law enforcement to effectively fight illegal activity.

            Blunt is a strong advocate for protecting Missouri from illegal immigration.  He recently outlined his principles for the Missouri Housing Development Commission that include possible sanctions of up to a lifetime ban of contractors and developers who knowingly employ illegal immigrants in violation of federal law. 

           Earlier this year Gov. Blunt ousted a state contractor who hired illegal workers and ordered state agencies to enact a no tolerance policy through tough new contract protections. The governor cancelled the state's contract with Sam's Janitorial Services and barred them from doing further business with the state after local and federal law enforcement agencies identified dozens of suspected illegal immigrants working under falsified documents. 

            Blunt also authored the state's first directive to audit all contractors to ensure that the contract employees are legally eligible to work in the U.S. and to terminate contracts if it is determined a contractor employs illegal immigrants. He added tough provisions in state contracts to allow the state to immediately cancel contracts if it determines the contractor knowingly has employees not eligible to work in the U.S. and to require contractors to certify that all their employees meet state and federal employment eligibility requirements.

Two Branson Residents Injured While Fleeing from Branson PD

Courtesy SNL

Two Branson residents were injured early this morning when their motorcycle crashed as they were fleeing from Branson police, the Missouri Highway Patrol said.

Joseph Linehan, 28, and Christy Breidenstein, 25, were injured when Linehan was driving a 1984 Kawasaki motorcycle on Missouri 76 in Branson, according to the patrol's report. They fled from police, entered a private lot and the motorcycle crashed, ejecting Linehan and Breidenstein.

Linehan's suffered moderate injuries and Breidenstein's were described as minor. Both were reportedly wearing helmets and taken by ambulance to Skaggs Community Health Center in Branson, the Missouri Highway Patrol said.

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Fla. televangelist loses show after Muslim group complains

By The Associated Press
08.27.07

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — A Christian televangelist who harshly criticizes Islam and other religions said Aug. 24 that his late-night program was being pulled off the air because of pressure from a Muslim group.

Earlier this month, officials from the Council on American Islamic Relations wrote a letter to the TV station's owners asking for an investigation of the show it broadcasts, "Live Prayer with Bill Keller."

In a May 2 broadcast, the televangelist said Islam was a "1,400-year-old lie from the pits of hell" and called the Prophet Muhammad a "murdering pedophile." He also called the Quran a "book of fables and a book of lies."

Council officials asked for equal air time for Florida Muslims to counter Keller's comments, but never got the chance.

The hourlong show, which airs nightly at 1 a.m., is broadcast on WTOG-TV, a CBS-owned station that airs the CW network locally. WTOG station manager Laura Caruso said the decision to end Keller's contract was a programming one, made by station executives and the televangelist.

But after speaking with CBS executives, the Islamic group claimed credit for Keller's demise. His last broadcast will be Aug. 31.

"They really based their decision upon our letter," said Ramzy Kilic, the group's civil rights coordinator. "They really did not know that Bill Keller was involved with this kind of anti-Muslim rhetoric."

Keller is slated to begin a new morning TV show on another Tampa Bay area station, WTTA, on Sept. 3. A telephone message left with WTTA on Aug. 24 was not immediately returned in time for this story.

Ahmed Bedier, executive director of the Tampa office of CAIR, said the council was weighing its options on what to do regarding Keller's apparent new employment.

"Obviously we have concerns," Bedier said. "He's more of a liability with stations than an asset."

Keller said his "Bible-based" message hasn't changed in the five years the program has aired.

"(CAIR) intimidated the folks in New York, and the folks in New York caved in," Keller said.

Keller, a regular guest on satellite radio's Howard Stern Show, is critical of many religions. He regularly refers to the Mormon church as a cult and told readers of his online column that a vote for presidential candidate Mitt Romney, a Mormon, "is a vote for Satan." That drew a complaint to the Internal Revenue Service from the watchdog group Americans United for Separation of Church and State, which contends Keller's nonprofit ministry should be stripped of its tax-exempt status over his comments regarding a political candidate.




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Our Continuing Work in New Orleans

After the Storm
Our Continuing Work in New Orleans
Nine FBI agents earlier this year joined forces with detectives from the New Orleans Police Department to help solve cases and tamp down crime. The rotation of agents from cities across the U.S. is just one of our many efforts in New Orleans since Hurricane Katrina made landfall two years ago.

You are subscribed to FBI Headlines or a related category. This information was updated and is now available.


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Monday, August 27, 2007

Gov. Blunt Announces New Directives to Fight Illegal Immigration

Blunt: "We cannot wait for Washington to stop unlawful immigration"

            JEFFERSON CITYGov. Matt Blunt today said he is not waiting for Washington to enforce federal immigration law as he outlined tough new initiatives to enforce the laws against illegal immigration.

Blunt highlighted a tragic murder in Newark where an illegal immigrant, who was previously arrested for child rape and released on bail, was among those charged in the murder of three promising young college students.  Identifying the murderer as an illegal immigrant when he was originally arrested could possibly have prevented the murders. 

            "We cannot be complacent about illegal immigration, and we cannot wait for Washington to stop unlawful immigration," Blunt said.  "We must be proactive to protect Missourians from harm and help prevent what happened in New Jersey from happening in Missouri.  We will make every effort, implement every tool, and take every step to ensure the laws against illegal immigration are enforced."

            To prevent a similar tragedy in Missouri , Blunt today directed all law enforcement units in the Department of Public Safety (Water Patrol, Highway Patrol and Capitol Police) to:

·         Prepare for special 287(g) training and deputization that allows state law enforcement officials to enforce federal immigration law as authorized through section 287(g) of the Immigration and Nationality Act.

·          Encourage and assist local law enforcement to apply for 287(g) status and to otherwise offer state assistance, resources and support including making available Live Scan for local law enforcement agencies that will use it.  To date, the state has invested more than $2 million of homeland security money in Live Scan, which allows fingerprints to be scanned in the field.

·         Verify the immigration status of every individual presented for incarceration with ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) computer background status check and to complete full background checks on any accompanying adults.  Anyone identified as illegal will be detained to prevent them from committing any crimes.           

          Today's announcement is part of a tough new strategy Blunt designed to fight illegal immigration and activity in Missouri.

            Blunt is a strong advocate for protecting Missouri from illegal activity.  He recently sent a letter to the Missouri Housing Development Commission outlining principles for the commission to consider regarding illegal immigration that include possible sanctions of up to a lifetime ban of contractors and developers who knowingly employs illegal immigrants in violation of federal law. 

            The letter follows the governor's tough stand against illegal immigration and workers. Earlier this year Gov. Blunt ousted a state contractor who hired illegal workers and ordered state agencies to enact a no tolerance policy through tough new contract protections. The governor cancelled the state's contract with Sam's Janitorial Services and barred them from doing further business with the state after local and federal law enforcement agencies identified dozens of suspected illegal immigrants working under falsified documents. 

            Blunt also authored the state's first directive to audit all contractors to ensure that the contract employees are legally eligible to work in the U.S. and to terminate contracts if it is determined a contractor employs illegal immigrants. He added tough provisions in state contracts to allow the state to immediately cancel contracts if it determines the contractor knowingly has employees not eligible to work in the U.S. and to require contractors to certify that all their employees meet state and federal employment eligibility requirements.


 



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Jane Drummond, Director of Missouri's Department of Health and Senior Services Challenges Jay Nixon on Planned Parenthood Suit

IN MAJOR CONFLICT, NIXON WANTS ONLY PRO-PLANNED PARENTHOOD PARTIES REPRESENTING BOTH SIDES IN PLANNED PARENTHOOD CASE

Jefferson City - Jane Drummond, Director of the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services today exposed Attorney General Jay Nixon's efforts to manipulate the court to assure that both the defendant and plaintiff support Planned Parenthood in Planned Parenthood's lawsuit against the department.  Planned Parenthood filed the lawsuit against a new law that regulates abortion clinics to provide for women's health and safety.

In a brief filed Friday, Nixon agrees with Planned Parenthood's assertion that the department should not be represented by the attorneys Drummond hired to defend the department.  If Nixon gets his way, Planned Parenthood, the plaintiff, would be represented by pro-Planned Parenthood attorneys, and the department, the defendant, would be represented by another Planned Parenthood supporter: Nixon himself.

"Jay Nixon's attempt to manipulate the court by stacking the deck by assuring that both the defendant and plaintiff support Planned Parenthood is another example of his conflict of interest in this case," Drummond said.  "We are in the beginning stages of this case and already my attorneys have provided a more thorough brief, they were the only ones who provided an expert witness and they are working at no cost to the Missouri taxpayer.  Jay Nixon has received financial and political support from Planned Parenthood and he cannot effectively represent my department in our defense against Planned Parenthood.  Jay Nixon's attempt to manipulate the court is the definition of conflict of interest."

Drummond pointed out that Nixon's attorneys moved to represent the department a day after the first hearing on the case.  Drummond asked Nixon if it is his usual practice to file an entry of appearance after a hearing at which his client's interests are addressed. 

Drummond also noted that her attorneys filed a thorough and excellent defense of the department's interest in the case with a brief that cited 19 cases.  Additionally, Drummond's attorneys were the only ones who provided an expert witness.

 

 ------------------------------------

Letter to Jay Nixon August 27, 2007

 

 

The Honorable Jay Nixon

Attorney General

Attorney General's Office

Supreme Court Building

Jefferson City, MO 65101

 

Dear Mr. Nixon

 

I was surprised to hear from my attorneys that you filed an entry of appearance on behalf of the Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) on Friday, August 24, 2007.  My attorneys had already filed an entry of appearance on my behalf in the morning of Wednesday, August 22,

2007.  And you had already filed the entry of appearance on your own behalf in the evening of Tuesday, August 21, 2007.  Your effort seems a little late especially as the TRO hearing took place on Thursday.  Is it your usual practice to file an entry of appearance after a hearing at which your client's interests are addressed?

 

Additionally, my attorneys worked with your attorneys to prepare for the Thursday hearing.  As you know, my attorneys provided a physician to serve as an expert witness.  You provided no expert witness.  My attorneys in this case are working at no cost to the state - truly pro bono service at its best. 

 

My attorneys also worked quickly and briefed the TRO issues as instructed by the court and filed a thorough brief on Friday.  The brief cited 19 cases and was, I think, a thorough and excellent defense of the department's interests in the case.

 

Your attorneys filed a less thorough TRO brief on Friday.  Moreover, I did not see your brief before you filed it (and did not expect to do so) but was surprised that you filed it on behalf of DHSS.  I feel certain you realize that if you were representing me and my department that I

would expect to see and approve briefs before they are filed.

 

 Finally, I read with interest footnote 1 in your brief where you state that you agree with Planned Parenthood and their motion.  How odd.  You seek to represent me but decide that a motion by the plaintiff Planned Parenthood against my department's interests is one you can support.

 

 

 

The Honorable Jay Nixon

Attorney General

Page 2

August 27, 2007

 

 

This strikes me as just the kind of collaboration with Planned Parenthood that further indicates that you have a conflict of interest in this case.  I am saddened that you continue to fail to see how poorly your efforts to represent the department reflect on you and your office.

 

I am asking you to cease and desist asserting that you are the lawyer for the department in this case.

 

Sincerely,

                                               

 

Jane Drummond

Director

 

 



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Blowing whistle on contractor fraud in Iraq comes at high price

 By The Associated Press
08.27.07

NEW YORK — One after another, the men and women who have stepped forward to report corruption in the massive effort to rebuild Iraq have been vilified, fired and demoted.

Or worse.

For daring to report illegal arms sales, Navy veteran Donald Vance says he was imprisoned by the American military in a security compound outside Baghdad and subjected to harsh interrogation methods.

There were times, huddled on the floor in solitary confinement with that head-banging music blaring dawn to dusk and interrogators yelling the same questions over and over, that Vance began to wish he had just kept his mouth shut.

He had thought he was doing a good and noble thing when he started telling the FBI about the guns and the land mines and the rocket-launchers — all of them being sold for cash, no receipts necessary, he said. He told a federal agent the buyers were Iraqi insurgents, American soldiers, State Department workers, and Iraqi embassy and ministry employees.

The seller, he claimed, was the Iraqi-owned company he worked for, Shield Group Security Co.

"It was a Wal-Mart for guns," he says. "It was all illegal and everyone knew it."

So Vance says he blew the whistle, supplying photos and documents and other intelligence to an FBI agent in his hometown of Chicago because he didn't know whom to trust in Iraq.

For his trouble, he says, he got 97 days in Camp Cropper, an American military prison outside Baghdad that once held Saddam Hussein, and he was classified a security detainee.

Also held was colleague Nathan Ertel, who helped Vance gather evidence documenting the sales, according to a federal lawsuit both have filed in Chicago, alleging they were illegally imprisoned and subjected to physical and mental interrogation tactics "reserved for terrorists and so-called enemy combatants."

'Their lives get ruined'
Corruption has long plagued Iraq reconstruction. Hundreds of projects may never be finished, including repairs to the country's oil pipelines and electricity system. Congress gave more than $30 billion to rebuild Iraq, and at least $8.8 billion of it has disappeared, according to a government reconstruction audit.

Despite this staggering mess, there are no noble outcomes for those who have blown the whistle, according to a review of such cases by the Associated Press.

"If you do it, you will be destroyed," said William Weaver, professor of political science at the University of Texas-El Paso and senior adviser to the National Security Whistleblowers Coalition.

"Reconstruction is so rife with corruption. Sometimes people ask me, 'Should I do this?' And my answer is no. If they're married, they'll lose their family. They will lose their jobs. They will lose everything," Weaver said.

They have been fired or demoted, shunned by colleagues, and denied government support in whistleblower lawsuits filed against contracting firms.

"The only way we can find out what is going on is for someone to come forward and let us know," said Beth Daley of the Project on Government Oversight, an independent, nonprofit group that investigates corruption. "But when they do, the weight of the government comes down on them. The message is, 'Don't blow the whistle or we'll make your life hell.'

"It's heartbreaking," Daley said. "There is an even greater need for whistleblowers now. But they are made into public martyrs. It's a disgrace. Their lives get ruined."

No happy endings
Bunnatine "Bunny" Greenhouse knows this only too well. As the highest-ranking civilian contracting officer in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, she testified before a congressional committee in 2005 that she found widespread fraud in multibillion-dollar rebuilding contracts awarded to former Halliburton subsidiary KBR.

Soon after, Greenhouse was demoted. She now sits in a tiny cubicle in a different department with very little to do and no decision-making authority, at the end of an otherwise exemplary 20-year career.

People she has known for years no longer speak to her.

"It's just amazing how we say we want to remove fraud from our government, then we gag people who are just trying to stand up and do the right thing," she says.

In her demotion, her supervisors said she was performing poorly. "They just wanted to get rid of me," she says softly. The Army Corps of Engineers denies her claims.

"You just don't have happy endings," said Weaver. "She was a wonderful example of a federal employee. They just completely creamed her. In the end, no one followed up, no one cared."

But Greenhouse regrets nothing. "I have the courage to say what needs to be said. I paid the price," she says.

Then there is Robert Isakson, who filed a whistleblower suit against contractor Custer Battles in 2004, alleging the company — with which he was briefly associated — bilked the U.S. government out of tens of millions of dollars by filing fake invoices and padding other bills for reconstruction work.

He and his co-plaintiff, William Baldwin, a former employee fired by the firm, doggedly pursued the suit for two years, gathering evidence on their own and flying overseas to obtain more information from witnesses. Eventually, a federal jury agreed with them and awarded a $10 million judgment against the now-defunct firm, which had denied all wrongdoing.

It was the first civil verdict for Iraq reconstruction fraud.

But in 2006, U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III overturned the jury award. He said Isakson and Baldwin failed to prove that the Coalition Provisional Authority, the U.S.-backed occupier of Iraq for 14 months, was part of the U.S. government.

Not a single Iraq whistleblower suit has gone to trial since.

"It's a sad, heartbreaking comment on the system," said Isakson, a former FBI agent who owns an international contracting company based in Alabama. "I tried to help the government, and the government didn't seem to care."

Government won't sign on
One way to blow the whistle is to file a "qui tam" lawsuit (taken from the Latin phrase "he who sues for the king, as well as for himself") under the federal False Claims Act.

Signed by Abraham Lincoln in response to military contractors selling defective products to the Union Army, the act allows private citizens to sue on the government's behalf.

The government has the option to sign on, with all plaintiffs receiving a percentage of monetary damages, which are tripled in these suits.

It can be a straightforward and effective way to recoup federal funds lost to fraud. In the past, the Justice Department has joined several such cases and won. They included instances of overbilling for the government's Medicare and Medicaid health insurance programs for the elderly and poor, and padded invoices from domestic contractors.

But the government has not joined a single qui tam suit alleging Iraq reconstruction abuse, estimated in the tens of millions. At least a dozen have been filed since 2004.

"It taints these cases," said attorney Alan Grayson, who filed the Custer Battles suit and several others like it. "If the government won't sign on, then it can't be a very good case — that's the effect it has on judges."

The Justice Department declined comment.

Most of the lawsuits are brought by former employees of giant firms. Some plaintiffs have testified before members of Congress, providing examples of fraud they say they witnessed and the retaliation they experienced after speaking up.

Julie McBride testified last year that as a "morale, welfare and recreation coordinator" at Camp Fallujah, she saw KBR exaggerate costs by double- and triple-counting the number of soldiers who used recreational facilities.

She also said the company took supplies destined for a Super Bowl party for U.S. troops and instead used them to stage a celebration for the company.

"After I voiced my concerns about what I believed to be accounting fraud, Halliburton placed me under guard and kept me in seclusion," she told the committee. "My property was searched, and I was specifically told that I was not allowed to speak to any member of the U.S. military. I remained under guard until I was flown out of the country."

Halliburton and KBR denied her testimony.

She also has filed a whistleblower suit. The Justice Department has said it would not join the action. But last month, a federal judge refused a motion by KBR to dismiss the lawsuit.

'I thought I was among friends'
Donald Vance, the contractor and Navy veteran detained in Iraq after he blew the whistle on his company's weapons sales, says he has stopped talking to the federal government.

Navy Capt. John Fleming, a spokesman for U.S. detention operations in Iraq, confirmed the detentions but said he could provide no further details because of the lawsuit.

According to their suit, Vance and Ertel gathered photographs and documents, which Vance fed to Chicago FBI agent Travis Carlisle for six months beginning in October 2005. Carlisle, reached by phone at the Chicago FBI field office, declined comment. An agency spokesman also would not comment.

The Iraqi company has since disbanded, according the suit.

Vance said things went terribly wrong in April 2006, when he and Ertel were stripped of their security passes and confined to the company compound.

Panicking, Vance said, he called the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, where hostage experts got on the phone and told him "you're about to be kidnapped. Lock yourself in a room with all the weapons you can get your hands on.'"

The military sent a Special Forces team to rescue them, Vance said, and the two men showed the soldiers where the weapons caches were stored. At the embassy, the men were debriefed and allowed to sleep for a few hours. "I thought I was among friends," Vance said.

The men said they were cuffed and hooded and driven to Camp Cropper, where Vance was held for nearly three months and his colleague for a little more than a month. Eventually, their jailers said they were being held as security internees because their employer was suspected of selling weapons to terrorists and insurgents, the lawsuit said.

The prisoners said they repeatedly told interrogators to contact Carlisle in Chicago. "One set of interrogators told us that Travis Carlisle doesn't exist. Then some others would say, 'He says he doesn't know who you are,'" Vance said.

Released first was Ertel, who has returned to work in Iraq for a different company. Vance said he has never learned why he was held longer. His own interrogations, he said, seemed focused on why he reported his information to someone outside Iraq.

And then one day, without explanation, he was released.

"They drove me to Baghdad International Airport and dumped me," he said.

When he got home, he decided to never call the FBI again. He called a lawyer, instead.

"There's an unspoken rule in Baghdad," he said. "Don't snitch on people and don't burn bridges."

For doing both, Vance said, he paid with 97 days of his life.



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Barack Obama on First Amendment

Obama's First Amendment record shows varied views

By Courtney Holliday
First Amendment Center Online intern
08.09.07

In his 11 years in government service as a member of the Illinois Senate and the U.S. Senate, Barack Obama has taken varied stances on issues related to the First Amendment.

Although his expertise is not in First Amendment law, Sen. Obama, D-Ill., does have experience in constitutional law, having served as a senior lecturer in law at the University of Chicago, where he specialized in due process. As an attorney with Miner, Barnhill and Galland, P.C., Obama litigated civil rights cases, particularly in the areas of voting rights and employment.

As a presidential candidate who often touts his religion, Obama has been outspoken in supporting the expression of religious beliefs by public officials while also championing separation of church and state. In his June 2006 keynote address at the Call to Renewal's Building a Covenant for a New America conference in Washington, D.C., Obama noted that while religion is not necessary for morality, "Secularists are wrong when they ask believers to leave their religion at the door before entering into the public square." Obama also spoke in this address of the important role that religious individuals played in establishing the First Amendment's religious freedoms.

In discussing how to build partnerships between the religious and the secular, the Democrat noted that although progressives should allow acknowledgement of religion by believers, conservatives should "understand the critical role that the separation of church and state has played in preserving not only our democracy, but the robustness of our religious practice."

"Folks tend to forget that during our founding, it wasn't the atheists or the civil libertarians who were the most effective champions of the First Amendment. It was the persecuted minorities. It was the forbearers (sic) of the evangelicals who were the most adamant about not mingling government with (the) religious, because they did not want state-sponsored religion hindering their ability to practice their faith as they understood it," he said.

Advocating freedom of information as a state senator in Illinois, Obama successfully co-sponsored the Verbatim Record Bill, S.B. 1586, with state Rep. Barbara Flynn Currie, D-Chicago. This legislation, which was signed into law in August 2003 after having been pushed by the Illinois Press Association for nearly a decade, requires public bodies to make video or audio recordings of any meetings occurring behind closed doors. The bill passed the House and the Senate by large margins and made Illinois the first state to enact a law of this type.

Illinois Press Association Executive Director David L. Bennett praised the bill when it passed: "All public officials will have to watch what they do. They are going to have to think about how they behave when they go behind closed doors."

Since being elected to the U.S. Senate in 2004, Obama has advocated similar transparency in government, co-sponsoring the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006 with Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla. The act, signed by President Bush last September, created an online database to track around $1 trillion in government spending on grants and contracts. The law "represented a small but important step in the effort to change the culture in Washington, D.C.," according to a statement released to the public by Obama and Coburn after the bill was signed. The senators also said it would equip American taxpayers with "a significant tool that will make it much easier to hold elected officials accountable for the way taxpayer money is spent."

The law, which is to go into effect Jan. 1, 2008, will allow citizens to scrutinize government contracts. Individuals will be able to search the database for companies, associations, states or localities to determine what federal grants and contracts the entities have received.

"By allowing Americans to Google their tax dollars, this new law will help taxpayers demand greater fiscal discipline," Bush said about the law.

Recently, Obama joined in the Senate's unanimous vote for the OPEN Government Act, which updated the open-government requirements of the Freedom of Information Act. The Associated Press also reported that he said in an August campaign stop in Iowa that if elected president, he would issue an executive order for information to be released to individuals and groups who request it as long as doing so harms no protected interests.

On the campaign trail, Obama has pledged to increase the general public's access to information if he is elected president. A June 25 article in The New York Times reported he has promised that as president, he would post non-emergency bills for five days online to give the public a chance to provide feedback before he signed them into law.

Though Obama has been a champion of the First Amendment in the areas of religion and transparency, less attractive to First Amendment advocates may be Obama's record on campaign-finance, petition and cultural-expression issues.

Obama introduced the Curtailing Lobbyist Effectiveness through Advance Notification, Updates, and Posting Act (The CLEAN UP Act) in 2006. This bill would have opened congressional conference committee meetings and deliberations to the public and/or televise them. Additionally, any changes to a bill from the House and Senate versions would have to be identified by the conference reports. The full Senate could not have considered a bill until it was available to all senators and the general public online for at least 72 hours. This unsuccessful bill was aimed at giving the public greater information access — but presumably at the expense of "lobbyist effectiveness." Lobbying is a form of the First Amendment-protected right to petition. The bill died after it was referred to the Committee on Rules and Administration.

In the arena of lobbying as it affects campaign finance, Obama was a leader in passing the Senate's Legislative Transparency and Accountability Act. This ethics- and lobbying-reform bill, sent in August to President Bush to be signed, is similar to one that Obama had introduced with Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., in January 2007. The provisions from Obama and Feingold's bill that were used in the recently passed act include bans on gifts and meals from lobbyists, longer time limits for legislators before transitioning from government service to lobbying, and a halt to subsidizing corporate jet travel for lawmakers. The current bill also contains an amendment written by Obama that requires contributions collected for candidates, leadership PACs and party committees by lobbyists to be disclosed. Obama's Senate Web site noted that The Washington Post said about the amendment, "No single change would add more to public understanding of how money really operates in Washington."

In recent campaign speeches, Obama has further said that if he is elected president, his administration would prohibit past political appointees from lobbying the executive branch during his term.

In 2004 when Illinois residents pushed for legislation to create "Choose Life" license plates, Obama, then a state senator, was critical. Choose Life Illinois Inc., a group composed mostly of adoption advocates, had tried to get legislative approval for the plates, and the state had refused. In January 2007, U.S. District Judge David H. Coar ordered the state to offer the plates and dismissed accusations that the plates represented an anti-abortion message. However, some opponents, including Obama, saw the plates as an unfair promotion of an anti-abortion position.

"If we're going to promote one side, the other side has to be promoted as well," Obama said during discussion on the legislation, according to the Associated Press.

Though Coar saw the plates as more pro-adoption than anti-abortion, he responded to opponents by saying that the message itself did not matter. "The First Amendment protects unpopular, even some hateful speech. The message conveyed by the proposed license plate is subject to First Amendment protection," he said in his opinion.

On less politically charged, but perhaps more pervasive, topics, Obama has expressed distaste for some forms of speech, although he has not attempted to ban them through legislation.

Discussing recent attention to misogynistic and violent lyrics in rap music at an April 2007 campaign event in South Carolina, Obama said, "I think that all of us have become a little complicit in this kind of relaxed attitude toward some pretty offensive things." He added, "Just because you can say something doesn't mean you should say something." When talking about the rappers' terms for women, Obama said they were "degrading their sisters," and that he "wasn't inspired."

Obama has also spoken out about indecency on television. In a November 2005 speech to the Kaiser Family Foundation, Obama stated his support for the work of Sens. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, and Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, who have advocated for more indecency regulation of broadcasters and cable companies. In that speech Obama described the difficulty in balancing First Amendment liberties with cultural values in the context of regulating sex and violence on television.

"It's one thing to discuss sex and violence on television within the larger context of the culture wars — as a values debate between First Amendment crusaders and those who believe government should decide what we can and cannot watch — but it's another thing altogether to be faced with these issues while you're sitting in front of the TV with your child," he said in the speech.

He described the problems of children being exposed to certain elements of sex and violence so early and asserted that broadcasters have a responsibility to society.

"We know that with the pervasiveness of mass media today — the existence of so many means of communication that are so easily accessible all over the world — it's very difficult to regulate our way out of this problem. And for those of us who value our First Amendment freedoms — who value artistic expression — we wouldn't want to," he said. "We also need to make it clear that for both broadcasters and their competitors there are large civic obligations to the American public. Obligations to reflect not the basest elements of American culture, but the profound and the proud," he added.

He later praised steps that the Federal Communications Commission has taken to monitor broadcasters as the transition to digital television begins, one of which requires broadcasters to air children's educational programs on all digital streams.

One not-so-publicized incident with First Amendment implications involving Obama occurred during a May 2007 presidential campaign fundraiser at a Richmond, Va., art gallery Plant Zero.

The Richmond Times-Dispatch reported in a May 9 article that before the event, Obama's staff told local artist Jamie Boling to cover two of his paintings in the gallery, saying the paintings were a "deal breaker." If the paintings remained in sight, staffers said, the event would not take place at the gallery. One of the works was a 6-by-10-foot painting of an exposed Britney Spears getting out of a limousine, and the other depicted a young woman wearing a "Kill Lincoln" T-shirt from the movie "Fast Times at Ridgemont High." Boling replaced one painting and covered the other with a sheet.

Though he told the Times-Dispatch that at first he felt censored, Boling said, "The longer I thought about it, I realized what the issue was. That space that leads into the event space was going to be used for photography."

Another incident that drew the attention of First Amendment advocates involved Obama's children. According to ABC News, Obama's campaign threatened legal action this year against Lindsay Ashford, an American expatriate living in Europe and a self-professed pedophile who posted on his Web site judgments on the "cuteness" of presidential candidates' children. Obama's attorney, Robert Bauer, sent a cease-and-desist letter to Ashford in February, calling the use of photos and the comments "a criminal act." Bauer demanded immediate removal of the photos, and references to Obama and his family.

Ashford, who mentioned no criminal act in naming the girls, said he was merely attempting political satire, and that he had no intention of removing the references from his site (although he did remove the photos).

Attorneys specializing in free speech said they were surprised by Obama's threat of legal action. "If Obama knows that his lawyer is doing this, then that's one reason not to vote for him. These are clear free-speech issues," Maryland-based First Amendment lawyer Jonathan Katz told ABC News on March 8.

Lawrence Walters, a Florida-based constitutional lawyer, told ABC that he doubted Obama would win such a lawsuit if one were filed.

"The big concern I would have is that if in the abstract, you don't allow free speech for these kinds of people, that's something to really think about. When we're looking at the platform of the campaign, who else doesn't get free-speech rights? You have to think through the implications," Walters said.

Courtney Holliday is a junior majoring in economics and public policy at Vanderbilt University in Nashville.

From http://firstamendmentcenter.org

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Waxy O' Sheas Irish Pub - Branson September Music Schedule


Sat  9/1 - YOUNG DUBLINERS
Sun  9/2 - FBS and TED

Wed  9/5 - Open Mic Night
Thurs 9/6 - Pub Quiz
Fri 9/7 - JAM DOCTORS
Sat 9/8 - DIRTY OLD TOWNE
Sun 9/9 - Open Mic Night

Wed 9/12 - Open Mic Night
Thurs 9/13 - Pub Quiz
Fri 9/14 - BEAT OFFICERS
Sat 9/15 -STRANGELY ENUFF
Sun 9/16 - Open Mic Night

Wed 9/19 - Open Mic Night
Thur 9/20 - Pub Quiz
Fri 9/21 - TBA
Sat 9/22 - $2 PISTOLS
Sun 9/23 - Open Mic Night

Wed 9/26 - Open Mic Night
Thurs 9/27 - Pub Quiz
Fri 9/28 - SEQUAL DOSE
Sat 9/29 - DIRTY OLD TOWNE
Sun 9/30 - Open Mic Night
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Branson Board of Aldermen Agenda

BRANSON BOARD OF ALDERMEN
AGENDA
August 27, 2007 7:00 p.m.
Meeting Called to Order
Pledge of Allegiance
Invocation – Larry VanGilder
Roll Call
Approval of Minutes – August 13, 2007 Special Meeting
August 13, 2007 Special Meeting
August 13, 2007 Regular Meeting & Public Comments Meeting
____________________________________________________________________________________
CONSENT AGENDA:
1) Acknowledge Receipt of Minutes:
a) Planning & Zoning Commission meeting of August 1, 2006
b) Planning & Zoning Commission meeting of September 5, 2006
c) Planning & Zoning Commission meeting of October 3, 2006
2) Final Reading of Bill No. 3431 approving a Planned Development amendment to the Branson 1st Stop Land Use Regulations PD-99-005 pertaining to uses permitted for properties located at 220 Branson Hills Parkway.
3) Final Reading of Bill No. 3432 amending Section 86-621 of the Branson Municipal Code: Schedule I: Stop Signs.
4) Final Reading of Bill No. 3433 amending Chapter 34 of the Branson Municipal Code Courts, Article II Municipal Court, Section 34-43 Court Costs.
5) Final Reading of Bill No. 3434 awarding a bid to CenturyTel for the upgrade of voicemail service to Call Pilot.
6) Final Reading of Bill No. 3435 awarding a bid for activated carbon used in the City wastewater treatment facilities.
REGULAR:
August 27, 2007
Board of Aldermen Agenda
Page 2 of 4
7) Public Hearing and First Reading of Bill No. 3436 annexing property petitioned by the Lezah Stenger Foundation and Fall Creek Partners, LLC, 598 Animal Safari Road.
8) Public Hearing and First Reading of Bill No. 3437 approving a final subdivision plat for Turtle Creek Phase 1 and 2 for properties located at 2581 Highway 248.
9) Public Hearing and First Reading of Bill No. 3438 establishing the annual levy of a property tax for general revenue in the city of Branson.
10) First Reading of Bill No. 3439 adopting an investment policy for the City of Branson, Missouri and authorizing actions in connection therewith.
11) First Reading of Bill No. 3440 amending Chapter 86 of the Branson Municipal Code Traffic and Vehicles, Article III Operation of Vehicles, Section 86-112 Operation of Bicycles; Riding Motorized Bicycle on Sidewalk.
12) First Reading of Bill No. 3441 vacating a sanitary sewer easement in the Thousand Hills Subdivision.
13) First Reading of Bill No. 3442 approving a parking garage management agreement and authorizing actions in connection therewith.
BID AWARDS:
14) First Reading of Bill No. 3443 accepting the proposal of bid award for the fall asphalt overlay contract for the Public Works Department for the City of Branson, and authorizing the Mayor to execute the agreement.
RESOLUTIONS:
15) A Resolution naming Larry VanGilder as the invocation leader at the regular meetings of the Branson Board of Aldermen.
DISBURSEMENTS:
16) Disbursements
OTHER BUSINESS:
August 27, 2007
Board of Aldermen Agenda
Page 3 of 4
17) Rescheduling of the September 10, 2007 regular meeting of the Board of Aldermen.
CITY ALDERMEN/CITY ADMINISTRATOR'S REPORTS
SPECIAL AGENDA ITEM
18) A meeting of the Board of Aldermen and the Property Owners of the Branson Landing Transportation Development District
a. Approval of Minutes, June 26, 2006
b. Election of two Directors to expired terms of the District's Board of Directors
c. Adjourn Property Owners Meeting
ADJOURN
BRANSON

Waxy O Sheas - Young Dubliners coming to celebrate first anniversary


The Young Dubliners, an Irish band living in  Los Angeles, is making a guest appearance at Waxy O Sheas Irish Pub to celebrate the Branson based Irish Pub's first anniversary.

On Labor Day weekend the Young Dubliners will be headlining at the Kansas City Irish Fest August 1 and 2. Waxy O Sheas owner Lee Sanford said, "We're excited to have such a great band after releasing a great album called the Irish sessions.".

The show starts at 9:00 PM Saturday Sept. 1st.

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