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tlfn EXCLUSIVE: Secret U.S.-Israel Nuclear Accord In Jeopardy
« le: Janvier 02, 2025, 05:55:53 am »
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 The scene said everything about the year in white-collar crime: Bernard Ebbers, the jocular, folksy former boss of WorldCom Inc., hunched forward in a courtroom chair, quietly crying.He had just been sentenced to 25 years in prison for orchestrating the record $11 billion accounting fraud at the toppled telecom mdash; essentially a life term for a man 63 years old and with a history of heart trouble.It was a startling punishment, but far from extraordinary in 2005. In the cavalcade of recent corporate scandals, this was the year the hammer finally fell hard on top executives.And the trend toward harsher sentences for corporate crooks comes just as the curtain goes up on what s expected to be the most complex of the white-collar cases to date, the fraud trial of Enron founder Kenneth Lay and two other former officials.Set to get start Jan. 17, the En stanley cups uk ron trial brings the corporate crime era full-circle. Enron s crash into bankruptcy in 2001 p stanley us redates scandals at WorldCom, Adelphia Communications Corp. and Tyco International Ltd.        It also promises to be intriguing. Lay has already mounted a public defense that rivaled Martha Stewart s, including a blitz of television appearances and interviews. He says he trusted the wrong people and valiantly tried to save the energy giant.For Lay, former CEO Jeffrey Skilling and former top Enron accountant Richard Causey, the consequences of conviction are dire. Consider the fates met by convicted corporate executives in 2005 alone.Eb stanley mugs ber Qnml Accused Cannibal Pleads Not Guilty
 Today is Mardi Gras, and like any booze-fueled street celebration, that means tons of full-bladdered revelers seeking out a place to relieve themselves. Thankfully, technology   here to save New Orleans from becoming a literal Urinetown. Meet AirPnP, the web app that lets you do your business in the privacy of a stranger   home.     As the name so aptly suggests, AirPnP takes the room-sharing model of AirBnB and zooms it in to the urgent necessities. Residents and business owners鈥攅ntrepeeneurs, as they ;re called鈥攐ffer up their facilities with straightforward or cheeky listings, with a going rate of $1 to $3 per, uh, visit. Some  stanley tazas offer perks alongside the porcelain  free beer with ever stanley botella y pee is a great way to guarantee repeat customers , while others are using their bathrooms as a fundraiser, sort of the opposite end of the traditional bake sale. Founders and New Orleanians Travis Laurendine and Max Gaudin launched AirPnP after experiencing the pain point of having no place to legally urinate during Mardi Gras. As they explain: This problem is often solved by using what is known as a rogue pee. If caught the person faces a weekend in Orleans Parish Pris stanley cup on. Yet this stiff penalty doesn ;t stop thousands upon thousands of rogue pees. This clearly demonstrates the demand for a legal alternative. Mardi Gras is the first event for AirPnP, but we ;re seriously hoping it goes nationwide. It   a Fa