This new plan comes on the heels of a July 10th deadline that was missed by the government to reunify children under age five
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Inside the Trump administration’s plan to reunite 2,500 immigrant children with their families
This new plan comes on the heels of a July 10th deadline that was missed by the government to reunify children under age five
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Inside the Trump administration’s plan to reunite 2,500 immigrant children with their families
Alex Ferrer is shining a spotlight on everyday people who are stepping up to corporate greed on the new show Whistleblower . Before his TV career took off, Ferrer served as a police officer in Florida, received his Juris Doctor degree from the University of Miami and was appointed to the Miami Circuit Court as a judge all before the age of 35. Now Ferrer is using his extensive history with the law and his passion for doing right to provide a platform for corporate change in the U.S. CBS Local’s Matt Weiss spoke to Ferrer ahead of Whistleblower ‘s series premiere this Friday. MW: Hey Alex, how’s it going? AF: Good Matt, how are you doing? MW: Doing good over here! I’m so glad I got the chance to talk to you today because I’ve been looking forward to the premiere of Whistleblower for a while now. What did you find so enticing about making a show like this? AF: Well most people who watch Judge Alex know that I was a police officer at a very young age and then an attorney and then a judge before I started doing the TV show. But I’m still an attorney, I have a law practice and part of what I do is whistleblower work. It’s lead me to really focus on the fact that the stories of whistleblowers, what they go through and what they do for us, are fascinating stories. So I paired up with CBS – my partner Ted Eccles and I brought it to CBS and they just fined tuned it to a gem of a show. When you watch this show you’re going to feel for these individuals who, at great personal risk they came forward and basically threw away their job, often threw away their career, because they were working for somebody who was stealing from all of us and they weren’t going to sit back and let it happen. So many people say, “Well that’s wrong but I need a paycheck – I’ve got kids to raise, I’ve got a mortgage to pay,” all of us do and these people really often suffer greatly. We’ve had whistleblowers who lose their homes, sometimes lose their marriage because they came forward and did the right thing. You feel for them in that respect and you can relate to them. There is a law out there that allows for whistleblowers to be compensated and what I love about this is that these whistleblowers, when they decide to blow the whistle, don’t even know there’s the possibility of a reward. They do it because it’s the right thing to do and then they’re surprised to find out that if they prevail in the whistleblower lawsuit they can receive a substantial reward. We’ve had whistleblowers who’ve received millions, tens of millions, even some over a hundred million dollars because they get to share in the recovery of compensation that the government gets. For those people who say, “An individual can’t do anything, what am I going to do? I’m one person against a big corporation.” In our first show we have a whistleblower who is personally responsible, just him, for his employer paying back the U.S. government over 500 million dollars. One person can make a big difference and I think that people are going to really enjoy seeing these heroes. MW: This can even give people the motivation to step forward themselves. AF: Exactly. MW: Why did you feel like now was the right time to make this show? AF: This is a time in America where everybody is demanding accountability, whether it’s the #MeToo movement or just social media in general – people get called out now for wrong doing whereas before people would just shrug and it would slide under the radar. I think this is the perfect time to showcase these individuals who have been doing this for so long. This is not a new concept, the whistleblower concept has been around since Abraham Lincoln – in fact the law that allows for compensation is referred to as Lincoln’s Law. Every year there are about 800 whistleblower cases brought. I think that the public sees other people who know of wrongdoing coming forward and calling out corporate greed. I don’t care if you’re a millennial or a baby boomer – nobody likes corporate greed, nobody likes companies stealing from all of us. It’s going to lead to more people coming forward and doing the right thing. That has a cleansing effect on society, corporations aren’t going to be able to continue to do this in darkness and hide their misdeeds. They’re going to have to worry about who here in my company who knows what I’m doing is going to blow the whistle and that can have a very positive effect. There’s between about 100 and 300 billions dollars stolen yearly from the U.S. government, from all of us. I’d like to get that $300 billion and put it towards our national debt. MW: I think most people would certainly be on board for that. Aside from recouping all that lost money – what do you want people to take away from this show? AF: I would like for this show to have the effect of turning all of us into a national posse. When we know that there’s theft and wrongdoing going on that we put a stop to it – that’s moving the country in the right direction. For years I think we’ve been going in the opposite direction where we shrug our shoulders, we’ve heard about it before and we’re like, “Oh well, more of the same.” I think we can turn this around and when people see these whistleblowers and how they put everything on the line just to do the right thing, I think it’s going to really encourage people to do the same. I think the least we can do is showcase the heroes that they are. MW: Well thank you so much for talking to me today Alex and good luck with the show! AF: Thanks, it was great talking to you. MW: You too, take care! Don’t miss the premiere of Whistleblower this Friday, July 13th at 8/7 Central, only on CBS. Check your local listings for more information.
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Alex Ferrer On Corrupt Organizations, “Between 100 And 300 Billion Dollars Stolen Yearly From The U.S. Government”
(CNN) — Paul Manafort’s complaints about his life in jail backfired spectacularly Wednesday. After weeks of him saying he couldn’t prepare for his late July trial behind bars, a federal judge ordered the former Donald Trump campaign chairman to be transferred to an Alexandria , Virginia, detention facility minutes from DC. For almost a month, he has lived in a VIP unit at a rural Virginia regional jail two hours from Washington, where he’s retained some conveniences of the outside world. “It is surprising and confusing when counsel identifies a problem and then opposes the most logical solution to that problem,” Judge T.S. Ellis wrote about Manafort’s requests in his order to move him out of Northern Neck Regional Jail in Warsaw, Virginia. Prosecutors described in their own court filing Wednesday how Manafort had told people in phone calls from the jail that he is “being treated like a ‘VIP’” and has reviewed all the documents needed for his bank fraud trial. The prosecutors’ descriptions of his jail conditions imply that Manafort has had a far easier living situation than other inmates. He does not stay in a cell, but rather has a separate workroom and private bathroom and shower in his holding area. He has a telephone and laptop with an extension cord and doesn’t have to wear a prison jumpsuit. Manafort has had hundreds of phone calls with his lawyers and even more with others and has sent emails through his lawyers to outside contacts, the special counsel’s office wrote in the filing. Regarding how he’s prepared for trial, prosecutors heard him say on a taped call that he’s reviewed all the evidence, met with his lawyers every day and has “all my files like I would at home,” the filing says. Manafort has even used a workaround, prosecutors allege, to send more emails to outsiders: He “reads and composes emails on a second laptop that is shuttled in and out of the facility by his team. When the team takes the laptop from the jail, it reconnects to the internet and Manafort’s emails are transmitted,” the prosecutors said. Manafort’s attorneys criticized the prosecutors’ descriptions of the jail conditions and his emailing tactics, saying the idea of being a VIP is exaggerated. “The Special Counsel does not pause to consider the reasons a detained defendant might have to make his situation sound better when speaking with concerned friends and family,” Manafort’s attorneys said in a filing later Wednesday. They wrote that prosecutors’ “cavalier dismissal of the challenges of preparing for back-to-back complex white collar criminal trials while the defendant is in custody shows a lack of concern with fairness or due process.” Previously, they had described him as being kept in “solitary confinement” almost 24 hours a day for his own safety. Manafort’s life inside the Alexandria facility will be just as secure — but likely not in as expansive a suite. “The professionals at the Alexandria Detention Center are very familiar with housing high-profile defendants including foreign and domestic terrorists, spies and traitors,” Ellis wrote. “All of those defendants were housed safely in Alexandria pending their respective trials and defendant’s experience at the Alexandria Detention Center will presumably be no different.” Manafort’s three-week jury trial on 18 counts of alleged financial crimes is set to begin July 25 at the federal courthouse in Alexandria. Next week, both sides will discuss with the judge the possibility of delaying the trial or moving it to Roanoke, in the southwest part of Virginia, to avoid the political culture of DC. Prosecutors oppose changing the trial plans. More Manafort setbacks Ellis delivered another piece of bad news for Manafort in a second court order Wednesday. He denied Manafort’s request to throw out from the trial evidence investigators had obtained from his apartment in Alexandria last July. The search was not too broad, as Manafort had alleged, and did not violate his constitutional rights, Ellis said. “These facts, taken together, lend ample support to the common-sense conclusion reached by the magistrate judge here, namely that probable cause existed,” Ellis wrote about the search warrant that investigators obtained and some of the evidence seized in the search. A day earlier, Ellis had denied Manafort’s attempt to throw out the evidence from boxes of business files investigators found in a storage unit. Separately, in Washington federal court, prosecutors building a second criminal case against Manafort disclosed their allegation that the longtime lobbyist’s foreign lobbying violations date to the 1980s. Prosecutors would like to use in his fall criminal trial the accusation that Manafort broke foreign lobbying laws three decades ago to show that he knew the extent of the law. In 1986, prosecutors wrote, the Justice Department investigated foreign lobbying work by Manafort and his two companies at the time. Though Manafort registered to lobby for Saudi Arabia, they say he didn’t disclose to the government lobbying and public relations work he did for the Bahamas and Saint Lucia. In addition, prosecutors say he was involved in 18 foreign lobbying activities that went unreported to the Department of Justice. Manafort at the time was both registered as a foreign lobbyist and leading a federal agency, the Overseas Private Investment Corp. The Reagan White House didn’t grant him a waiver to serve as both a public official and a foreign lobbyist, so instead of registering with the Justice Department or resigning from the federal agency, Manafort avoided the disclosures, prosecutors say. He was not charged with a crime then. “Manafort contended only his firms — and not he — needed to register,” prosecutors wrote in Wednesday’s court filing. In May 1987, the Justice Department warned Manafort that he hadn’t correctly made full disclosures and asked him to explain $350,000 he had earned in fees above the revenue he had reported. Prosecutors’ filing Wednesday also alleges that the two political consulting companies Manafort worked with, Black Manafort Stone & Kelly and Black, Manafort & Stone, had received warnings about their foreign lobbying disclosures. (The “Stone” in his organizations’ titles referred to Roger Stone, an adviser to Trump who’s also facing inquiries from the Robert Mueller probe. Stone does not face criminal charges.) Prosecutors are seeking the court’s approval to use the details about Manafort’s work 30 years ago as it presents the case against Manafort to a jury in September. That trial, in DC federal court, tackles allegations that Manafort broke foreign lobbying laws and conspired to launder his proceeds. — Katelyn Polantz The-CNN-Wire ( & © 2018 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.)
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Paul Manafort Thinks He’s Being Treated Like A ‘VIP’ In Jail, Special Counsel Says
A federal judge says the government needs to quickly comply with a court order to reunite young immigrant children with their parents. Only 38 of 102 children under the age of five were reunified by a July 10th deadline. Mireya Villarreal reports.
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Judge tells government to streamline immigrant family reunifications
All immigrant children under five years old who have been separated from their parents were supposed to be reunited by Tuesday. Last week, the government reported “under 3,000” children are still in federal custody. CBS News’ Mireya Villarreal spoke to one immigrant father who hasn’t seen his 10-year-old daughter in nearly a month.
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Only 54 young immigrants separated from parents to be reunited by deadline
MAE SAI, Thailand (CBSNewYork) — At least four of the 12 boys trapped in a cave in Thailand have been rescued, Thai navy SEALs said. The rescue operation began Sunday morning and Thai officials say it could take two to four days depending on conditions inside the cave. MORE FROM CBS NEWS The boys are expected to walk for much of the journey since the water level has been brought down. “Divers will work with doctors in the cave to examine each the kids’ health to determine who should get to come out first,” Chiang Rai acting Gov. Narongsak Osatanakorn said Sunday. The boys, between the ages of 11 and 16, and their soccer coach have been trapped inside the flooded cave for nearly two weeks. They became stranded after they went exploring following a practice game on June 23 and weren’t found for almost 10 days. The U.S. is working very closely with the Government of Thailand to help get all of the children out of the cave and to safety. Very brave and talented people! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 8, 2018 On Sunday, President Donald Trump said in a tweet that “The U.S. is working very closely with the Government of Thailand to help get all of the children out of the cave and to safety. Very brave and talented people!” A former Thai navy SEAL died on Friday after passing out underwater while delivery oxygen tanks inside the cave. Three workers were injured in a fall at the site on Saturday.
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At Least 4 Boys Rescued From Thailand Cave
The fate of about 100 immigrant children separated from their families at the U.S.-Mexico border remains in question as a deadline approaches for the Trump administration to reunite them with their families. A judge ruled the reunions must be made by Tuesday, but the government wants more time. The children are under the age of five. Paula Reid reports.
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Trump defends ICE amid protests across the country
A San Diego federal judge Friday ordered the Trump administration to produce by 5 p.m. Saturday a list of all children under 5 who have been forcibly separated from their parents at the border.
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Judge Orders List Of Children Separated From Parents At Border
Executive Engineer of Roads and Buildings ( R&B ), Malkangiri, Arun Kumar Sahu said 43.27 ha of Government land and 46.95 ha of private land has …
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Work on Malkangiri airstrip set to take off
JAMMU, June 13: Government today issued orders of transfer and posting of four Incharge Executive Engineers in the R&B Department while one was …
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4 XEns shifted, one given addl charge of Kathua
JAMMU: The Government on Friday ordered placement of four Executive Engineers (XEns) (Civil) as Superintending Engineers (SEs) of PW( R&B ) …
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Four PWD XEns promoted as SEs, 5 transferred
Nnenna Freelon, Lyfe Jennings, the Sax Pack and Eric Benet (pictured) will be among the performers at the 26th annual Las Vegas City of Lights Jazz and R&B Festival at noon Saturday and 1 p.m. Sunday at the Clark County Government Center Amphitheatre, 500 S. Grand Central Parkway. Saturday's …
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This week's 5 best bets for shows in Las Vegas
The Government on Saturday ordered promotions, transfers and posting of Chief Engineers in the Public Works Department. According to a government order issued in this regard, consequent upon superannuation of Abdul Hamid, I/C Development Commissioner Works in PWD, Satish Razdan, I/C …
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Nisar Ahmad Bhat is new Chief Engineer R&B Kashmir
Despite the prolonged drought, the 63rd staging of the Denbigh Agricultural Show has been labelled a success by Government officials.
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Denbigh successful despite drought, say officials
GROS ISLET, St Lucia — Government climate negotiators and civil society groups from the Caribbean who met with artistes and journalists here last week have discussed strategies to drum up local awareness and attract international attention as part of the region’s preparation for the climate change meeting in Paris at the end of the year.
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Caribbean formatting climate change strategy for Paris meeting