| Allegations of officers’ sex misdeeds leads to scrutiny from Congress |
WASHINGTON – As a novice CIA case officer in the Middle East, Andrew Warren quickly learned the value of sex in recruiting spies. Colleagues say that he made an early habit of taking informants to strip clubs, and that he later began arranging out-of-town visits to brothels for his best recruits. Often Warren would travel with them, according to two colleagues who worked with him for years. His methods earned him promotions and notoriety over a lengthy career, until Warren, 41, became ensnared in a sex scandal. Two Algerian women have accused the Virginia native of drugging and sexually assaulting them, and, in one instance, videotaping the encounter. Six weeks after the allegations came to light, Warren has been formally notified by CIA Director Leon E. Panetta of his impending dismissal, according to U.S. government officials familiar with the case. But the episode — one of three sex-related scandals to shake the CIA this year — has drawn harsh questions from Congress about whether the agency adequately polices its far-flung workforce or takes sufficient steps to root out corrupt behavior. Breaking News |
March 20, 2009
February 6, 2009
Should you continue to shell out 60 bucks a pop for the latest games?
Sure, games offer more bang for the buck — but 60 bucks is a lot these days
Bottom line: Because people are still buying games. The most recent report from the NPD Group shows that despite the recession and the cratering retail environment, game hardware, software and accessories were up 19 percent in 2008. Even if their wallets are light, says analyst Todd Greenwald, this data shows that gamers will pay retail for their favorite titles.For 60 bucks, you get 400 TV channels for a whole month. You can buy three cases of Budweiser. Or, you can buy one video game.
Yes, yes. I know you’ll get 20 hours of quality gaming entertainment for your “Killzone 2” purchase versus 200 hours of “Iron Chef.” But times are tough, and consumers are spooked. 60 bucks is 60 bucks. Why should game publishers expect to get top dollar when General Motors can’t move SUVs? Full Story |
USA Swimming suspends Phelps for 3 months
Financial support cut after gold medalist was pictured holding pot pipe
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Michael Phelps was suspended from competition for three months by USA Swimming, the latest fallout from a photo that showed the Olympic great inhaling from a marijuana pipe.The sport’s national governing body also cut off its financial support to Phelps for the same three-month period, effective Thursday.
“This is not a situation where any anti-doping rule was violated, but we decided to send a strong message to Michael because he disappointed so many people, particularly the hundreds of thousands of USA Swimming member kids who look up to him as a role model and a hero,” the Colorado Springs-based federation said in a statement. Full Story |
Greenberg gears up for battle with AIG
A court fight may decide whether a pot of shares once worth more than $20 billion goes to AIG or the former chairman’s charity.
(Fortune) — Did former American International Group chairman Maurice R. Greenberg betray a longstanding commitment by seizing control of billions of dollars worth of AIG shares pledged to employees?
That’s the question at the heart of a case slated for trial next month in New York federal court that pits the once-mighty insurance giant against the man who ran it for nearly four decades. Greenberg was forced out of AIG in 2005 amid a wide-ranging probe into the company’s accounting by former New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer. But Greenberg managed to retain control of a sister company known as Starr International Co. (SICO), which holds hundreds of millions of AIG shares. It’s the ownership of those shares that are in dispute. Full Story |







(Fortune) — Did former American International Group chairman Maurice R. Greenberg betray a longstanding commitment by seizing control of billions of dollars worth of AIG shares pledged to employees?

