Wednesday, May 1, 2013

FOXNews.com: Syria's Assad reportedly makes rare public appearance

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Syria's Assad reportedly makes rare public appearance
May 1st 2013, 12:59

Published May 01, 2013

Associated Press

AMMAN, Jordan –  Syria's state television says President Bashar Assad has made a rare public appearance, visiting a Damascus power station on May Day the day after a powerful bomb hit the capital.

The Wednesday broadcast showed brief clips of Assad speaking to workers at what it said was the Umayyad Electrical Station in the Tishrin Park district.

At least 14 people were killed in the blast. It was the second attack in the heart of the capital, Assad's seat of power, in two days.

The television showed Assad, looking confident and wearing a dark business suit, shaking hands with workers.

It also showed Assad standing in a garden talking with the workers, who encircled him.

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FOXNews.com: BOMBER BURIAL: Suspect's Funeral Planned After Wife Releases Body

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BOMBER BURIAL: Suspect's Funeral Planned After Wife Releases Body
May 1st 2013, 13:10

The uncle of the two men authorities say were behind the Boston Marathon bombing contacted a mosque to arrange a funeral for the older suspect killed shortly after the incident, the Islamic Society of Boston said.

Tamerlan Tsarnaev's body has been at the medical examiner's office in Massachusetts since he died after a gunfight with authorities more than a week ago.

Amato DeLuca, the Rhode Island attorney for his widow, Katherine Russell, said Tuesday that his client had just learned that the medical examiner was ready to release Tsarnaev's body and that she wants it released to his side of the family.

In addition to declining to claim the body herself, which is her right as his spouse, Russell has taken other steps to distance herself from Tsarnaev since taking refuge at her family's home on April 19, hours after her husband was killed. Her family released a statement shortly after she was escorted home by federal agents that day saying they "never really knew" Tsarnaev. Russell has also reverted to using her maiden name instead of the name listed on her marriage certificate, Tsarnaeva.

Until Tuesday's statement, DeLuca had declined to provide any details about Russell's contact with authorities, except to say that Russell was doing everything she could to assist with the investigation.

The exact cause of 26-year-old Tamerlan's death will be released once his body is handed over to the family. During a chaotic scene days after the April 15 bombing, he ran out of ammunition before his brother dragged his body under a vehicle while fleeing the scene, police said.

The family has said authorities will likely not release the body until the end of the week, the statement said. Tsarnaev's parents are still in Russia, but he has other relatives on his side of the family in the U.S.

"Of course, family members will take possession of the body," uncle Ruslan Tsarni of Maryland told The Associated Press on Tuesday night. "We'll do it. We will do it. A family is a family."

Tsarnaev has been dead for nearly two weeks, with his body unclaimed at the medical examiner's office. Sharia, or Islamic law, requires the dead to be buried as soon after death as possible after a funeral ritual that includes bathing and shrouding of the body, followed by prayers. Cremation is prohibited.

His younger brother, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19, is in a prison hospital after being wounded in the shootout with police as he and his brother made their getaway attempt. He is charged with using a weapon of mass destruction to kill, a crime that carries a potential death sentence.

U.S. law enforcement officials have been trying to determine whether Tamerlan Tsarnaev was indoctrinated or trained by militants during his visit to Dagestan, a Caspian Sea province that has become the center of a simmering Islamic insurgency.

The security official with the Anti-Extremism Center, a federal agency under Russia's Interior Ministry, confirmed the Russians shared their concerns. He said that Russian agents were watching Tsarnaev, and that they searched for him when he disappeared two days after the July 2012 death of the Canadian man, who had joined the Islamic insurgency in the region. The official spoke only on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the news media.

Security officials suspected ties between Tsarnaev and the Canadian - an ethnic Russian named William Plotnikov - according to the Novaya Gazeta newspaper, which is known for its independence and investigative reporting and cited an unnamed official with the Anti-Extremism Center, which tracks militants. The newspaper said the men had social networking ties that brought Tsarnaev to the attention of Russian security services for the first time in late 2010.

President Obama said Tuesday at a news conference that the U.S. counterterrorism bureaucracy "did what it was supposed to be doing" before the Boston Marathon bombing as his top intelligence official began a review into whether sensitive information was adequately shared and whether the U.S. government could have disrupted the attack.

"We want to go back and we want to review every step that was taken," Obama said. "We want to leave no stone unturned. We want to see, is there in fact additional protocols and procedures that could be put in place that would further improve and enhance our ability to detect a potential attack."

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FOXNews.com: CONSUMER CONFUSION: Poll Finds Many Unsure If ObamaCare is Still Law

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CONSUMER CONFUSION: Poll Finds Many Unsure If ObamaCare is Still Law
May 1st 2013, 10:44

  • health_form.jpg

    FILE: Undated: This application shows the short form for the new federal Affordable Care Act. The first draft was more complicated, like a tax form.AP

The Obama administration unveiled simplified forms Tuesday for health insurance benefits coming next year under the federal health care overhaul, as a new poll shows many Americans are confused by ObamaCare or do not even know it's the law of the land. 

The poll released by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that 4 in 10 Americans are unaware ObamaCare was signed into law. Some think it's been repealed by Congress, but in fact, it's still on track.

The poll also revealed that about half of the American public, 49 percent, say they do not have enough information about ObamaCare to understand how it will impact their own family.

Obama hailed the simplified forms as an example of how his team listened to criticism from consumer groups and made a fix at a news conference Tuesday. The law's benefits will be available to all Americans, he emphasized, even if Republicans in Congress still insist on repeal, and many GOP governors won't help put it into place.

The biggest change: a five-page short form that single people can fill out. That total includes a cover page with instructions, and an extra page to fill out if you want to designate someone to help you through the process.

However, the application form for families still runs to 12 pages, although most households will not have to fill out each and every page.

When the first draft of the application turned out to be a clunker, "immediately, everybody sat around the table and said, `Well, this is too long, especially...in this age of the Internet,"' Obama recounted. "`People aren't going to have the patience to sit there for hours on end. Let's streamline this thing."'

His administration is open to making improvements, Obama added: "Those kinds of refinements, we're going to be working on."

Consumers will start getting familiar with the new applications less than six months from now, on Oct. 1, when new insurance markets open for enrollment in every state. Most people with job-based benefits will not have to bother with the applications, only the uninsured.

Under the law, middle-class people who don't get coverage through their jobs will be able to purchase private insurance. Most will be able to get tax credits, based on their incomes, to make their premiums more affordable. Low-income uninsured people will be steered to government programs like Medicaid.

Benefits begin Jan. 1, and nearly 30 million uninsured Americans are eventually expected to get coverage.

While the first drafts of the applications were widely panned, the new forms were seen as an improvement. Still, consumers must provide a snapshot of their finances to see if they qualify for help. That potentially includes multiple sources of income, from alimony, to tips, to regular paychecks.

"Given the amount of information necessary to determine eligibility, it's hard to see how the forms could be any shorter," said Robert Laszewski, a former insurance executive turned industry consultant.

Activist Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA, is an administration ally who had openly criticized the first draft of the forms, worrying that consumers would get discouraged just trying to fill them out. He called the changes "very positive."

"There has got to be a balance to between getting adequate (financial) information to make sure everybody gets the help they're entitled to under the law, while at the same time trying to keep the process consumer-friendly," said  Pollack.

Although the new forms are shorter, the administration wasn't able to get rid of all the complexity. Individuals will have to gather tax returns, pay stubs and other financial records before filling out the application.

Administration officials expect most consumers to apply online through the new insurance marketplaces in each state. A single application process will serve to route consumers to either private plans or the Medicaid program. Identification, citizenship and immigration status, as well as income details, are supposed to be verified in close to real time through a federal "data hub" that will involve pinging Social Security, Homeland Security and the Internal Revenue Service.

Currently, applying for health insurance individually entails filling out a lengthy questionnaire about your health. Under Obama's overhaul, insurers will no longer be able to turn away the sick, or charge them more. The health care questions will disappear, but they'll be replaced by questions about your income. Consumers who underestimate their incomes could be in for an unwelcome surprise later on in the form of smaller tax refunds.

"Consumers will have a simple-easy to understand way to apply for health coverage later this year," said Medicare chief Marilyn Tavenner, also overseeing the rollout of the health care law. She said the application is "significantly shorter than industry standards."

Among the sections eliminated in the new form was one that asked applicants if they also wanted to register to vote. Some congressional Republicans had criticized that, calling it politically motivated.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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FOXNews.com: ABDUCTION SUSPECTED: Sketch Released in Search For Missing Michigan Mom

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ABDUCTION SUSPECTED: Sketch Released in Search For Missing Michigan Mom
May 1st 2013, 09:46

  • gasclerksketch12.jpg

    April 30, 3013: This sketch released by the Norton Shores, Mich., Police Department, shows a man wanted for questioning in the April 27 disappearance of Jessica Heeringa, 25, from a gas station where she was working as a clerk.AP

DETROIT –  A West Michigan police chief has released a sketch of a man sought for questioning in the disappearance of a 25-year-old woman from her job as a gas station night clerk.

Police are searching for a gray minivan and its driver, who is described as a white man, age 30 to 40, about 6 feet tall, with light brown wavy hair. The description is from witnesses who saw the van parked near the station and driving away.

Several friends and acquaintances of Jessica Heeringa, a petite 25-year-old gas station clerk who went missing while working the night shift, have been ruled out in her disappearance, which western Michigan investigators are treating as an abduction, the local police chief said Monday.

Police have frustratingly little evidence as they search for Heeringa, who disappeared Friday night shortly before the young mother was set to close an Exxon Mobil gas station in Norton Shores. The station didn't have a security camera and there were no signs of a struggle or robbery, though police have released a description of a vehicle and a man seen in the area.

Norton Shores Police Chief Daniel Shaw said relatives, friends and other people associated with Heeringa have been interviewed, and that investigators are "no longer really concerned with their activities from that night."

"We're moving on, trying to find other people," Shaw said.

A man trying to buy gas called police after finding the gas station open but no employees around.

"There's nobody here," Craig Harpster, 54, told a 911 operator in a recorded conversation authorities released Monday. "I hollered, 'Hey,' walked around the building. ... It just seems strange."

Investigators later found Herringa's purse and other personal belongings in the station, and the cash register untouched. Police described Herringa as 5-foot-1 and about 110 pounds.

"There's no sign of a struggle, no sign of anything inside the store being disturbed," Shaw said. "The cash drawer was sitting out and no money was missing. Her purse was in the store with 400-some dollars in it. It's just odd how that occurred."

Shaw said nearly two dozen law enforcement officials are following leads. The police chief described the city, home to about 24,000 people on the shores of Lake Michigan, as "quite safe" with a low rate of violent crime.

"The family believes that Jessica more than likely left to help (someone) in some way," Shaw said. "Their belief is that someone that she's either acquainted with or someone she was trying to help lured her out."

Heeringa's mother, Shelly Heeringa, told local media that she repeatedly told her daughter she worried about her working late by herself.

"She said, 'Mom, don't worry. I can handle anybody,'" she said.

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FOXNews.com: BENGHAZI PROBE: Obama Vows Inquiry Into Libya Survivors' Testimony

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BENGHAZI PROBE: Obama Vows Inquiry Into Libya Survivors' Testimony
May 1st 2013, 09:46

President Obama said he is unaware of longstanding efforts by Republican lawmakers to question survivors of the Benghazi attacks but pledged to investigate it.

"I'm not familiar with this notion that anybody has been blocked from testifying," the president said during a White House news conference on Tuesday. "So what I'll do is I will find out what exactly you're referring to."

Obama's pledge to find out more came as officials at the State Department pushed back against allegations -- first aired Monday on Fox News -- that career employees at the agency have been threatened if they furnish new information about the Benghazi attacks to members of Congress.

"The State Department is deeply committed to meeting its obligation to protect employees, and the State Department would never tolerate -- tolerate or sanction -- retaliation against whistle-blowers on any issue, including this one," spokesman Patrick Ventrell told reporters at a briefing on Tuesday. "That's an obligation we take very seriously -- full stop."

Four Americans, including U.S. ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens, were killed in terrorist attacks on U.S. installations in the port city of Benghazi, Libya on the night of Sept. 11, 2012. While the FBI investigation into the attacks continues, no known instances of any perpetrators being brought to justice have yet been reported.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, will hold the first in a new round of hearings on the subject on May 8.

In two letters to the State Department, dated April 16 and April 26, Issa has sought explicit guidance on how attorneys representing witnesses with knowledge of the Benghazi attacks, including their prelude and aftermath, can receive the security clearances necessary to review classified materials.

"Attorneys representing Department personnel in this matter will require clearance to possess and discuss Top Secret and Sensitive Compartmented Information," Issa wrote on April 16 to Mary McLeod, the principal deputy legal adviser to the State Department.

But Ventrell insisted Tuesday that no such whistle-blowers have come forward, and no requests for security clearances have been made by private attorneys.

Victoria Toensing, a former Justice Department official and onetime Republican counsel to the Senate intelligence committee, disclosed on Monday that she is representing a career State Department official who identifies himself as a whistle-blower. Toensing said this individual has been threatened by superiors with career-ending reprisals if he cooperates with the oversight committee.

"[The State Department has] had two letters from Chairman Issa, one on April 16th, the other one April 26th, that specifically say, 'We want you to provide a process for clearing a lawyer to receive classified information,'" Toensing said during an interview Tuesday on "America's Newsroom" with Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum.  "How can they possibly get up there and just lie to the press corps?"

Ventrell said that the State Department periodically sends out notices to the entire staff advising them of the protections whistle-blowers enjoy under federal law, and that such a notice, in accordance with regular practice every spring, was disseminated just last week.

Interviewed on the Los Angeles campus of the University of Southern California on Tuesday, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., argued the allegations of threats and intimidation expose the need for a more comprehensive probe of the Benghazi affair.

"People do not trust the president and his people," McCain told Fox News. "That's why we need a select committee."

Fox News' Martha MacCallum and Lee Ross contributed to this report.

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FOXNews.com: SEQUESTER THIS: Americans Find Ways to Get Around Gov't Cuts

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SEQUESTER THIS: Americans Find Ways to Get Around Gov't Cuts
May 1st 2013, 07:48

Americans cannot cover the entire $85 billion in federal budget cuts this year known as sequester, but they're pulling together to make up the losses for important matters like helping local economies and salvaging federal programs that serve needy children.

When the Navy decided to deal with sequester by pulling its popular Blue Angels fighter jet team from air shows and other events, organizers of Seattle's annual Seafair festival dug into their general fund to pay for a replacement –  the Patriots Jet Team.

Seafair President Beth Knox said the Blue Angels had performed at the festival over the past four decades so spending $80,000 was important to the community and worth the money.

"We've had to look outside the box and find ways that we can fill the gaps where our government is not able to provide those services," she told Fox News.

In addition to hiring the California-based group of retired fighter pilots, festival organizers also are bringing in a ship from the Canadian Navy to replace a U.S. warship that won't be coming to this summer's events. 

"Making sure the general public is educated about the value of our military, that doesn't change, even if the government has to cut back on its spending," Knox added.

In Wyoming, two cities stepped up when the National Park Service decided to save money by plowing snow at Yosemite National Park two weeks later than usual, which would have delayed the clearing of four park gates well past the typical May 1 opening.

The park service's decision will save U.S. taxpayers roughly $150,000, but it would have cost the cites of Cody and Jackson Hole much more because they depend on park-related tourism.

In response, city officials held a joint fundraiser and collected enough money to pay the state to clear the roads, ensuring the gates will be open on time.

"We needed to act, and if there was a way that we could make a difference we wanted to do that because people rely on that opening date," said Mayor Nancy Tia Brown. "And the moment that the park gate opens, things are different in Cody."

Officials told Fox many of the donations came from businesses that stood to lose revenue if the gates didn't open on time for the tens of thousands of visitors.

"We work on a 20-week tourism season, and if the first two weeks are going to be taken out because the park's not open, that's a big deal," said James Blair, of Blair Hotels.

In central Florida, a Head Start program directed to cut 5 percent from its budget as a result of sequester decided to temporarily stop contributions to the employee-retirement fund, instead of cutting services. The decision was made with support from staffers, according to The Tampa Bay Times.

The program provides child care and other services for preschool children from low-income families and for disabled children from families of all incomes.

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Tuesday, April 30, 2013

FOXNews.com: 'SHE'S REBORN': Girl Gets Windpipe Made From Her Own Stem Cells

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'SHE'S REBORN': Girl Gets Windpipe Made From Her Own Stem Cells
May 1st 2013, 06:47

  • Windpipe stem cells_AP_April 30 2013.jpg

    Hannah Warren, 2, poses with her parents Lee Young-mi and Darryl Warren at Seoul National University Hospital in Seoul, South Korea. Hannah received a new windpipe made from her own stem cells in a landmark operation on April 9, 2013, at Children's Hospital of Illinois in Peoria, Ill.AP Photo/The Korea Herald, Kim Myung-sub

A 2-year-old girl born without a windpipe now has a new one grown from her own stem cells, the youngest patient in the world to benefit from the experimental treatment.

Hannah Warren has been unable to breathe, eat, drink or swallow on her own since she was born in South Korea in 2010. Until the operation at a central Illinois hospital, she had spent her entire life in a hospital in Seoul. Doctors there told her parents there was no hope and they expected her to die.

The stem cells came from Hannah's bone marrow, extracted with a special needle inserted into her hip bone. They were seeded in a lab onto a plastic scaffold, where it took less than a week for them to multiply and create a new windpipe.

About the size of a 3-inch tube of penne pasta, it was implanted April 9 in a nine-hour procedure.

Early signs indicate the windpipe is working, Hannah's doctors announced Tuesday, although she is still on a ventilator. They believe she will eventually be able to live at home and lead a normal life.

"We feel like she's reborn," said Hannah's father, Darryl Warren.

"They hope that she can do everything that a normal child can do but it's going to take time. This is a brand new road that all of us are on," he said in a telephone interview. "This is her only chance but she's got a fantastic one and an unbelievable one."

Warren choked up and his wife, Lee Young-mi, was teary-eyed at a hospital news conference Tuesday. Hannah did not attend because she is still recovering from the surgery. She developed an infection after the operation but now is acting like a healthy 2-year-old, her doctors said.

Warren said he hopes the family can bring Hannah home for the first time in a month or so. Hannah turns 3 in August.

"It's going to be amazing for us to finally be together as a family of four," he said. The couple has an older daughter.

Only about one in 50,000 children worldwide are born with the windpipe defect. The stem-cell technique has been used to make other body parts besides windpipes and holds promise for treating other birth defects and childhood diseases, her doctors said.

The operation brought together an Italian surgeon based in Sweden who pioneered the technique, a pediatric surgeon at Children's Hospital of Illinois in Peoria who met Hannah's family while on a business trip to South Korea, and Hannah - born to a Newfoundland man and Korean woman who married after he moved to that country to teach English.

Hannah's parents had read about Dr. Paolo Macchiarini's success using stem-cell based tracheas but couldn't afford to pay for the operation at his center, the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm. So Dr. Mark Holterman helped the family arrange to have the procedure at his Peoria hospital, bringing in Macchiarini to lead the operation. Children's Hospital waived the cost, likely hundreds of thousands of dollars, Holterman said.

Part of OSF Saint Francis Medical Center, the Roman Catholic hospital considers the operation part of their mission to provide charity care, but also views it as a way to champion a type of stem-cell therapy that doesn't involve human embryos, the surgeons said. The Catholic church opposes using stem cells derived from human embryos in research or treatment.

Macchiarini has been involved in 14 previous windpipe operations using patients' own stem cells - five using man-made scaffolds like Hannah's but in adults; and nine using scaffolds made from cadaver windpipes, including one in a 10-year-old British boy.

He said only one patient died, a 30-year-old man from Abingdon, Md., who had the operation in November 2011 to treat late-stage cancer of the windpipe. He died about four months later of uncertain causes, Macchiarini said.

Similar methods have been used to grow bladders, urethras and last year a girl in Sweden got a lab-made vein using her own stem cells and a cadaver vein.

Scientists hope to eventually use the method to create solid organs, including kidneys and livers, said Dr. Anthony Atala, director of Wake Forest University's Institute for Regenerative Medicine. He said the operation on Hannah Warren "is really showing that the technique is workable."

Hannah had breathing difficulties at birth and Korean doctors soon discovered the missing windpipe. They reconfigured her esophagus so that a breathing tube could go down it from her mouth to her lungs. The esophagus normally runs behind the windpipe and carries food to the stomach.

Korean doctors said she couldn't live long with the tube and told her parents there was nothing more they could do.

Hannah outlived their expectations and has thrived despite the grim prognosis and other abnormalities including an undeveloped voice box that prevented her from speaking. Now that she has a windpipe and can breathe more normally, doctors expect the larynx to grow and function normally. She will work with speech therapists to help her learn to talk.

Holterman said Hannah will likely need a new windpipe in about five years, as she grows.

She breathes with help from a ventilator but no longer has a tube in her mouth that she'd lived with since shortly after birth, Holterman said. She's not yet able to eat normally, but doctors let her have her first taste ever of food - a few licks on a lollipop. Her father said she already has discriminating taste and prefers chocolate Korean lollipops to the American kind.

"I asked her, `Is it good?'" he said, "and she immediately nodded her head."

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