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Biographical information on Kenneth Feinberg
Legal Careers News | 2009/10/23 05:27

NAME — Kenneth R. Feinberg.

AGE — 63, born Oct. 23, 1945, in Brockton, Mass.

EXPERIENCE — Obama administration "pay czar" for financial bailout program, June 2009 to present. He is serving without pay, as he did as special master of Sept. 11 Victim Compensation Fund of 2001; founded the Feinberg Group LLP, law firm specializing in mediation, in 1993; partner at Kaye, Scholer, Fierman, Hays & Handler law firm, where he began mediating conflicts, 1980-93; administrative assistant to Sen. Edward Kennedy, 1977-79; special counsel to U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, 1975-80; assistant U.S. attorney, Southern District of New York, 1972-75; law clerk for Chief Judge Stanley H. Fuld, New York State Court of Appeals, 1970-1972.

EDUCATION — Bachelor's in history, University of Massachusetts, 1967; law degree, New York University School of Law, 1970.

FAMILY — Wife, Diane Shiff; three children.

QUOTE — "My grandmother in Lithuania would be a little shocked. I'm no czar issuing imperial compensation edicts. We have been working daily to come up with actual dollars that can be endorsed by these seven" companies.



Arkansas high court to review SWEPCO plant case
Breaking Legal News | 2009/10/23 03:23

The Arkansas Supreme Court said Thursday it will review a case involving Southwestern Electric Power Company's planned coal-fired power plant in south Arkansas.

The state Court of Appeals had overturned a permit that was issued by the Arkansas Public Service Commission for the $1.6 billion John W. Turk Jr. plant in Hempstead County. SWEPCO appealed that decision, and now the Arkansas Supreme Court is going to review the case.

The Appeals Court ruling, issued in June, said the Public Service Commission's process for considering such permits has been flawed. If upheld, the ruling would require the plant to start that process over.

SWEPCO said Thursday it was pleased the high court was to review the case.

"This is an important case — both for the Turk Plant and for the process used to approve major utility projects in Arkansas for more than 30 years," said Paul Chodak, SWEPCO's president and chief operating officer. "We believe the record in the case will show that the approval process was correct and that the Turk Plant approval should stand."

SWEPCO said that as of Sept. 30, about $830 million had been spent on the Turk project.

Opponents have argued that the plant would violate the federal Clean Air Act.



Arizona budget shortfall projection reaches $2B
Politics | 2009/10/23 02:26

Legislative budget analysts raised their estimate of Arizona's midyear budget shortfall to nearly $2 billion, up from approximately $1.5 billion. The growing shortfall, roughly a fifth of the budget, prompted calls to cut spending, increase taxes and raid voter-mandated programs.

The Joint Legislative Budget Committee staff on Thursday cited the latest drops in tax collections, increased spending for safety-net programs and newly reduced expectations from some budget-balancing maneuvers as it boosted its shortfall estimate on the current state budget.

Other elements of the shortfall already included a nearly $500 million deficit carried over from the last fiscal year and about the same amount of budget savings lost when Gov. Jan Brewer vetoed parts of the budget on Sept. 4.

The budget has roughly $10.1 billion of state spending, including $1.1 billion funded by federal stimulus dollars. Before being augmented by the federal money, borrowing and other maneuvers, regular state tax collections provide only $6.4 billion.

Arizona's economy has been hit hard by the recession, and economists said Thursday the recovery will be slow and long.



NJ man guilty of sex with Pa. teen met on Web
Criminal Law | 2009/10/23 02:23

A New Jersey man faces up to 40 years in prison when he's sentenced for twice traveling to western Pennsylvania to have sex with a teenage girl he met on the Internet.

Twenty-nine-year-old Andrew Luko, of Bridgeton, N.J. pleaded guilty Wednesday to two counts each of statutory sexual assault and aggravated indecent assault.

Cambria County prosecutors say Luko came to Pennsylvania twice in 2007 to have sex with the Johnstown-area girl in motels. She was 14 when he first visited in March of that year, and she had turned 15 by the time he visited for three days that July.

Police tracked Luko using motel records and his vehicle registration.



SoCal man pleads guilty in Swiss bank case
International | 2009/10/22 09:39

A Malibu man has pleaded guilty to failing to report more than $1 million he transferred to a Swiss bank account.

John McCarthy formally pleaded guilty on Tuesday to one count of failing to file a Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts report. He faces up to five years in prison and fines totaling $250,000 when he is sentenced on Jan. 28.

McCarthy was the first person to be named publicly after the Swiss and U.S. governments reached a deal in August to settle American demands for the identities of suspected tax dodgers. The Internal Revenue Service is seeking more than 52,000 names from UBS AG, but both governments wouldn't say how many names will be revealed.

Prosecutors say McCarthy funneled the money to a UBS account with the help of a Swiss lawyer and bank officials.



Alleged victims, bankrupt diocese in U.S. court
Bankruptcy | 2009/10/22 09:34

The bankrupt Catholic Diocese of Wilmington began its court fight Wednesday with

victims claiming sexual abuse by its priests over the value of its estate and how much will be available for claims.

Attorneys for most of the 142 victims indicated they may seek to expand the bankruptcy to include parishes that operate in the Delaware-based diocese but were not part of the Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing Sunday.

The attorneys for the diocese pledged an open process that they said would be the quickest way to resolve the claims that stem from alleged abuse beginning as far back as 1954.

The diocese became the seventh in the United States to seek bankruptcy protection, and its filing put on hold the scheduled start of eight civil trials relating to a defrocked priest.

Attorney James Patton, representing the diocese, opened the hearing by acknowledging the abuse by priests.



Court rejects Calif. plan to cut prison population
Breaking Legal News | 2009/10/22 09:33

A federal judicial panel has rejected California's plan for reducing the state's prison population because it failed to meet the terms of an earlier court order.

In August, the panel ordered California to reduce its inmate population by roughly 27 percent, or 40,000, over two years. The courts have found that prison overcrowding is the main cause of negligent medical and mental health care.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's administration subsequently submitted a plan calling for a reduction of 23,000 inmates.

On Wednesday, the judges gave the administration 21 days to submit a new plan. If it's inadequate, the court said it will develop its own.

In a statement, the administration said it objects to what it sees as an arbitrary inmate cap but will respond to the court on Nov. 12.



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