At wind farms throughout the US, iconic and protected birds regularly fly into spinning turbines. The crippled bodies of eagles are often found at the base of the machines after being cut up by the quickly spinning blades.These birds of prey were once included on the list of threatened and endangered species – and although they are no longer listed, their population is still significantly less than it was in the early 20thcentury. Under the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act of 1940, disturbing, killing or taking the birds or their eggs is a federal offense punishable by a maximum of two years imprisonment and a $250,000 for an individual felony conviction, and $500,000 for a felony conviction of an organization. The Obama administration has prosecuted oil companies when birds died in their waste pits and power companies when they were electrocuted, but has never once fined or prosecuted a wind farm.In Converse County, Wyo., a wind farm owned by PacifiCorp kills about one golden eagle each month, the Associated Press reports. Wind farms at Altamont Pass, Calif., kill more than 60 per year. Across the country, more than 573,000 birds are killed on wind farms each year, 83,000 of which are hunting birds, the Wildlife Society Bulletin reports.“There is nothing in the evolution of eagles that would come near to describing a wind turbine. There has never been an opportunity to adapt to that sort of threat,” Grainger Hunt, an eagle expert, told AP.The number of deaths could be even higher than estimated, since many companies do not disclose the number of birds that become mangled at the blades of their turbines. It is also likely that companies underreport this number.Some wildlife enthusiasts have condemned Obama for his hypocrisy in prosecuting oil companies for contributing to bird deaths, while ignoring the faults of the ‘green energy’ industry. The BP oil company paid $100 million in fines for harming migratory birds during the 2010 Gulf oil spill, while PacifiCorp paid $10.5 million for electrocuting 232 eagles in 2009.PacifiCorp also operates several wind farms, which have killed at least 20 eagles but for which it faced no fines or prosecution.“It is the rationale that we have to get off of carbon, we have to get off of fossil fuels, that allows them to justify this,” Tom Dougherty, an environmentalist who previously worked for the National Wildlife Federation, told AP. “But at what cost? In this case, the cost is too high.”If the US government were to enforce the law regarding the killing of eagles at wind farms, then green energy companies may be more inclined to build farms in areas where there are fewer birds of prey. But enforcing this law would likely slow down the wind farm industry, which would contradict the administration’s goal of boosting renewable energy industries, including wind and solar.“Clearly, there [is] a bias to wind energy in their favor because they are a renewable source of energy, and justifiably so,” Rob Manes of the Nature Conservancy told AP. “We need renewable energy in this country.”It may be near impossible for both eagles and wind turbines to co-exist in the long run – but with the administration warning about the effects of climate change and urging greater investments in wind farms, the US national bird could once again end up on the threatened species list. … Read More
Challenges prevail for justice in Guatemala
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More legal woes for Berlusconi as prosecutors demand bribery trial
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Silvio Berlusconi’s legal woes show no sign of subsiding, a day after his conviction for tax fraud was upheld.
Prosecutors in Naples have called for Italy’s ex-prime minister to face another trial on charges of bribing a former senator.
They accuse him of having paid Sergio De Gregorio three million euros to defect from his small party in 2006 and join the centre-right. A judge must decide first whether there is a case to answer.
Leaders of Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party – a key partner in the coalition government – have been meeting to consider their next moves. They have repeated accusations that judges are politically motivated.
“It’s a politicised judiciary, which practises politics, which wants to destroy politics of a certain orientation, so to speak. That’s blindingly obvious,” said Renato Brunetta from the PdL.
Berlusconi’s legal team had tried unsuccessfully to get the case moved from Milan, where an appeal court upheld a four-year jail term and five-year ban from public office for helping his media company avoid paying tax. The sentence will not take effect before Italy’s highest appeal court has its say.
Meanwhile his supporters are planning a protest rally in the northern city of Brescia on May 11.
Berlusconi’s separate case on charges of paying for sex with an underage prostitute is due to resume next week.
More about: Silvio Berlusconi, Tax fraud, Trial
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Italy: Berlusconi tax fraud conviction upheld
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An appeals court in Milan has upheld the tax fraud conviction and four-year prison sentence against former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi.
The case, which involves Berlusconi’s television company, could see him barred from public office for five years.
He is unlikely to serve jail time, but the verdict keeps the judicial heat on the conservative Italian leader.
“It’s a very bad judgement. We were convinced that this would be the decision of the Court of Appeal,” said Niccolo Ghedini, Berlusconi’s lawyer.
“We will now appeal to the Supreme Court.”
A court convicted the 76-year-old in October on the grounds that he bought US film and television rights at inflated prices, allowing his company – Mediaset – to fraudulently lower its tax bill.
Berlusconi has repeatedly denied the charges, saying he never took part in any contracts negotiating the company’s television rights.
In other trials in the past, Berlusconi has either been acquitted or let off under statutes of limitations.
More about: Italy, Justice, Silvio Berlusconi, Tax fraud, Trial
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Italian court upholds Berlusconi’s tax evasion conviction
An Italian court on Wednesday upheld a tax fraud conviction for former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, confirming his sentence of one year in prison and a five-year ban from public office. “The court confirms the sentence against Silvio Berlusconi,” a judge at the Milan court said in…
Berlusconi Tax-Fraud Conviction Upheld
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An appeals court in Milan has upheld the tax fraud conviction and four-year prison sentence against Silvio Berlusconi .
The case involving his television company could see the former Italian Prime MInister barred from public office for five years.
The penalties however, would only come into force if the 3 stroke process allowed under Italian law has been exhausted.
In other trials over the years, Mr Berlusconi has been accused of charges including accounting fraud, perjury, bribery and corruption all of which he has denied and has been been acquitted or let off under statutes of limitations
In October, a court convicted the 76 year old media mogul in a scheme that involved inflating the price, his Mediaset media empire paid for TV rights to U.S. movies and pocketing the difference.
Berlusconi denies all charges and says he’s a victim of politically motivated prosecutors.
More about: Italian politics, Italy, Silvio Berlusconi, Trial
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FBI says they’ve thwarted terror attack in Minnesota
Buford Rogers of Montevideo, Minnesota was arrested on Friday and charged him with one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm. More charges could be on the way, however, following a Monday morning statement made by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.In a press release issued Monday, the FBI wrote they believe “that a terror attack was disrupted by law enforcement personnel” by arresting Rogers and that “the lives of several local residents were potentially saved” thanks to the investigation.Special Agent in Charge of the Minneapolis Division of the FBI, J. Christopher Warrener, said in the statement that “cooperation between the FBI and its federal, state and local partners enabled law enforcement to prevent a potential tragedy in Montevideo” last week.Authorities believed there “would have been a localized terror attack, and that’s why law enforcement moved quickly,” FBI spokesman Kyle Loven told the Associated Press on Monday.Police say that they executed a search warrant at Rogers’ home on Friday and uncovered Molotov cocktails, suspected pipe bombs and at least one gun. Because he was previously convicted of a felony burglary, Rogers cannot lawfully own a firearm and was subsequently charged with illegal possession for owning what the AP has identified as a Romanian AKM assault rifle. The AP has also uncovered another 2009 misdemeanor conviction for Rogers involving the dangerous handling of a weapon.The FBI thought Rogers was in the “planning stages” of a terror attack, the AP continued, and he is believed to have targeted an area in western Minnesota.Montevideo is roughly 130 miles west of Minneapolis, MN and only a few minutes’ drive from the state’s border with South Dakota.A local Fox affiliate wrote Monday that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the Minnesota State Patrol, Bloomington police bomb squad and the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources were all involved in executing the search warrant. … Read More





