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From: CLG_News 
Sent: Monday, July 08, 2013 6:12 PM
To: CLG News 
Subject: Tritium soaring in water at Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant 08 Jul 2013 


Breaking News and Commentary from Citizens for Legitimate Government
08 Jul 2013
http://www.legitgov.org/
All links are here:
http://www.legitgov.org/#breaking_news


Tritium soaring in water at Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant 07 Jul 2013 Tokyo 
Electric Power Co. said Sunday that 600,000 becquerels per liter of tritium has 
been detected in groundwater at the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant. The 
water, sampled Friday, came from an observation well about 6 meters west of the 
plant's port. On Wednesday, the tritium level in the same well was 510,000 
becquerels per liter, Tepco said. The utility also said it had measured, on 
Wednesday, a seawater tritium level of 2,300 becquerels per liter -- the 
highest so far -- near the water intakes of reactors 1 to 4.

Crash survivor says everyone on plane had to be interviewed by FBI before they 
could be allowed to leave 06 Jul 2013 Moments after Asiana Airlines flight 214 
stopped its violent crash landing, a voice came over the plane's intercom to 
say it had landed safely and everyone should stay in their seats, a passenger 
told ABC News. Within minutes, however, flames could be seen outside the 
plane's windows and smoke was seeping into the cabin... The ordeal didn't end 
after their evacuation. Lee Jang Hyung said he was somewhere in the airport, 
but he didn't know where. They were told that everyone on the plane had to be 
interviewed by the FBI before they could be allowed to leave.

Bin Laden raid files reportedly purged from Pentagon computers, sent to CIA 08 
Jul 2013 The nation's top special operations commander ordered military files 
about the Navy SEAL raid on 'Usama bin Laden's' hideout to be purged from 
Defense Department computers and sent to the CIA, where they could be more 
easily shielded from ever being made public. The secret move, described briefly 
in a draft report by the Pentagon's inspector general, set off no alarms within 
the Obama administration even though it appears to have sidestepped federal 
rules and perhaps also the Freedom of Information Act. An acknowledgement by 
Adm. William McRaven of his actions was quietly removed from the final version 
of an inspector general's report published weeks ago. The CIA, noting that the 
'bin Laden' mission was overseen by then-CIA Director Leon Panetta before he 
became defense secretary, said that the SEALs were effectively assigned to work 
temporarily for the CIA, which has presidential authority to conduct covert 
operations. [Right, and here's why nearly every SEAL connected to the so-called 
bin Laden raid has mysteriously died: News of Bin Laden's Death and Funeral - 
December 2001.]

In Secret, Court Vastly Broadens Powers of N.S.A. 07 Jul 2013 In more than a 
dozen classified rulings, the nation's surveillance court has created a secret 
body of law giving the National Security Agency the power to amass vast 
collections of data on Americans while pursuing not only terrorism suspects, 
but also people possibly involved in nuclear proliferation, espionage and 
cyberattacks, officials say. The rulings, some nearly 100 pages long, reveal 
that the court has taken on a much more expansive role by regularly assessing 
broad constitutional questions and establishing important judicial precedents, 
with almost no public scrutiny, according to current and former officials 
familiar with the court's classified decisions. The 11-member Foreign 
Intelligence Surveillance Court, known as the FISA court, was once mostly 
focused on approving case-by-case wiretapping orders. But since major changes 
in legislation and greater judicial oversight of intelligence operations were 
instituted six years ago, it has quietly become almost a parallel Supreme 
Court, serving as the ultimate arbiter on surveillance issues and delivering 
opinions that will most likely shape intelligence practices for years to come, 
the officials said.

Agreements with private companies protect U.S. access to cables' data for 
surveillance 06 Jul 2013 The U.S. government had a problem: Spying in the 
digital age required access to the fiber-optic cables traversing the world's 
oceans, carrying torrents of data at the speed of light. And one of the biggest 
operators of those cables was being sold to an Asian firm, potentially 
complicating American surveillance efforts. Enter "Team Telecom." This "Network 
Security Agreement," signed in September 2003 by Global Crossing, became a 
model for other deals over the past decade as foreign investors increasingly 
acquired pieces of the world's telecommunications infrastructure.

The NSA's mass and indiscriminate spying on Brazilians 07 Jul 2013 I've [Glenn 
Greenwald] [co-]written an article on NSA surveillance for the Sunday edition 
of O Globo, the Brazilian newspaper based in Rio de Janeiro. The article is 
headlined (translated) "US spied on millions of emails and calls of 
Brazilians", and I co-wrote it with Globo reporters Roberto Kaz and Jose 
Casado. The rough translation of the article into English is here.

Snowden says Western states 'in bed with NSA' 07 Jul 2013 Fugitive intelligence 
leaker Edward Snowden said the US National Security Agency operates broad 
secret spying partnerships with other Western governments now complaining about 
its programmes, in an interview published Sunday. Snowden said in comments made 
before his exposure of US espionage practices came to light last month and 
printed in German news weekly Der Spiegel that NSA spies are "in bed together 
with the Germans and most other Western states". In remarks published in 
German, Snowden said an NSA department known as the Foreign Affairs Directorate 
coordinated work with foreign secret services.

Snowden Claims: NSA Ties Put German Intelligence in Tight Spot 07 Jul 2013 The 
German foreign intelligence service knew more about the activities of the NSA 
in Germany than previously known. "They're in bed together," Edward Snowden 
claims in an interview in SPIEGEL. The whistleblower also lodges fresh 
allegations against the British... SPIEGEL reporting also indicates that 
cooperation between the NSA and Germany's foreign intelligence service, the 
BND, is more intensive than previously known.

Israeli doctors to advise US on Guantanamo hunger strikers 08 Jul 2013 
Officials from the Israeli Medical Association have been invited to the U.S. to 
present policy makers there with their methods of handling hunger strikers, as 
the U.S. administration comes under fire for its own practice of force-feeding 
of Guantanamo Bay detention camp prisoners who refuse to eat. The invitation 
followed the officials remarks on the matter at a convention at Johns Hopkins' 
Bloomberg School of Public Health, one of the most prestigious medical 
faculties. Israeli policies regarding hunger strikers were formulated in a 
position paper of the IMA in February 2005.

DU Draws Heat for Plan to Present Bush with 'Improving Human Condition' Award 
--University's Korbel School of International Studies selected former president 
[sic] for honor at 2013 annual dinner 03 Jul 2013 Hundreds of students, 
staffers and alumni are protesting the University of Denver's decision to honor 
former President unelected sociopath George W. Bush with an award traditionally 
recognizing recipients for their work on behalf of humanity. "It's been mostly 
just a lot of surprise," Seth Masket, associate professor of Political Science 
said of the award to be bestowed by the University's Josef Korbel School of 
International Studies. On June 23, Christine Hart - a 2012 Korbel graduate with 
a master's degree in human rights - saw the announcement and wrote a petition 
objecting to her alma mater's choice of honoree. [Sadly, the petition may not 
work. Protesters need to *shut that insane dinner down.*]

At least 51 killed in Egypt, Islamists call for uprising 08 Jul 2013 At least 
51 people were killed on Monday when demonstrators enraged by the military 
overthrow of Egypt's elected Islamist president said the army opened fire 
during morning prayers outside the Cairo barracks where Mohamed Mursi is 
believed held. But the military said "a terrorist group" tried to storm the 
Republican Guard compound and one army officer had been killed and 40 wounded. 
Soldiers returned fire when they were attacked by armed assailants, according 
to a military source. In the deadliest incident since Mursi's removal, 
emergency services said more than 430 were wounded.

Bahaa el-Dinlikely to become Egypt interim PM: Presidential spokesman 07 Jul 
2013 An Egyptian presidential spokesman says leading opposition figure Mohamed 
ElBaradei is likely to become interim deputy president and Social Democratic 
lawyer Ziaad Bahaa el-Dinis is also likely to be appointed as interim prime 
minister.

Web monitoring tools made by U.S. firm Blue Coat detected in Iran, Sudan - 
Report 08 Jul 2013 American-made devices used for Internet monitoring have been 
detected on government and commercial computer networks in Iran and Sudan, in 
apparent violation of U.S. sanctions that ban the sale of goods, services or 
technology to the 'autocratic' states, according to new research. Several of 
the devices, manufactured by California-based Blue Coat Systems, were also 
discovered in Syria. Although Blue Coat tools have been identified in Syria in 
the past, the new research indicates that the government of President Bashar 
al-Assad has more of the monitoring devices than previously known.

Teresa Heinz Kerry hospitalized in Nantucket 07 Jul 2013 Teresa Heinz Kerry, 
wife of Secretary of State John Kerry, is in critical but stable condition 
after being taken by ambulance from the couple's Nantucket, Mass. home to a 
hospital on Sunday afternoon, sources close to the family told NBC News. A 
spokesman for Nantucket Cottage Hospital said Heinz Kerry, 74, was admitted to 
the emergency room around 3:30p.m. but gave no more public information about 
her condition.

Over three dozen arrested at DUI checkpoint in Sonoma County --Officers stopped 
the drivers of 1,027 cars between 6 p.m. and midnight Friday. 06 Jul 2013 (CA) 
A Sonoma County DUI task force stopped more than 1,000 vehicles Friday night in 
Santa Rosa and arrested 55 drivers, including 47 on suspicion of driving 
without a license, a spokesman said. The county task force, made up of the 
Sonoma County Sheriff's Office and a dozen local police departments, made the 
arrests at a DUI checkpoint in downtown Santa Rosa, Petaluma police Officer 
Walter Spiller said.

Some Sandy Hook Victims' Families Still Angry Over Fund 06 Jul 2013 Some family 
members of the 26 victims, including 20 first-graders, killed in the Sandy Hook 
Elementary School massacre say that the protracted battle with the foundation 
overseeing an $11.4 million fund over how the donations will be dispersed has 
left them victimized once again. In a meeting with The Courant this week, 
members of 12 of the families agreed to speak about their frustrations on the 
condition that their names not be published. The group has been battling with 
the Newtown-Sandy Hook Community Foundation Inc. for months over the 
dispersement of the fund. The family members say the group has ignored their 
pleas to bring in an independent party to oversee the process.

Japan moves closer to restarting nuclear reactors 08 Jul 2013 Japan has 
[insanely] moved a step closer to restarting nuclear reactors, with four 
utility companies applying for safety inspections of 10 idled plants, the 
clearest sign of a return to atomic energy almost two and a half years after 
the [start of the ONGOING] Fukushima disaster. About 160,000 evacuees still 
cannot return home... Dozens of activists opposing nuclear power staged rallies 
outside a building that houses the watchdog's office, holding banners and 
chanting anti-nuclear slogans.

Heads up! Tepco's nuclear power pimps are busy pushing to restart deadly 
reactors: Tepco's Woman on the Inside Leading Push to Restart Nuclear Reactors 
07 Jul 2013 ...The standards are part of an effort to change the culture of the 
Tokyo Electric Power Co. (Tepco) and convince lie to a skeptical public that 
its nuclear plants can be operated safely, said Barbara Judge, the deputy 
chairman of the company's Nuclear Reform Monitoring Committee, an internal 
'watchdog.' Judge was a former chairman of the U.K. Atomic Energy Authority. 
Women may be especially fearful of nuclear power, with a poll published in June 
2012 by the Pew Research Center in Washington finding that 61 percent of 
Japanese women worried about radiation exposure, as opposed to 42 percent of 
men. Judge, who also previously served as a director of the U.S. Securities and 
Exchange Commission, said she suspects that, as its sole woman, she was invited 
to join Tepco's five-member reform propaganda committee in part to help address 
this gender gap.

Critics Slam Adding Fluoride to Connecticut's Public Water Supplies 06 Jul 2013 
Saying the practice takes away the right of consumers to make medical choices 
and possibly inflicts serious harm on children [and adults], opponents of 
adding fluoride to public water argued Wednesday that a glass of water should 
contain water - and nothing else. At an informal hearing at the state Capitol 
called by state Sen. Joe Markley (R-Southington), chemist Paul Connett called 
on state lawmakers to abolish the state's flouridation law and forbid 
communities from putting additives in water supplies to improve destroy public 
health. "We should never use the public water supply to deliver medicine," said 
Connett, a retired Dartmouth professor and leading fluoridation critic. "No 
doctor could do to us what the state of Connecticut is doing." [Exactly!]

Canada runaway train: Lac-Megantic death toll rises 07 Jul 2013 Another two 
bodies have been found after a runaway train carrying crude oil exploded in the 
Canadian town of Lac-Megantic, police say. The death toll from Saturday's blast 
stands at five; there are fears it will rise further as 40 people are missing. 
The pre-dawn explosion sent a fireball and black smoke into the air, forcing 
the evacuation of 2,000 people. Dozens of buildings were destroyed in the town, 
about 250km (155 miles) east of Montreal.

Feds hope to learn more from 4 pilots aboard jet that crashed in San Francisco 
08 Jul 2013 Federal investigators said Monday they hope to learn much more from 
interviews with the four pilots aboard the jetliner that crash-landed at the 
San Francisco airport, and they said the aircraft was still 500 feet in the air 
-- much too high -- when it slowed to touchdown speed. Two days after Asiana 
Airlines Flight 214 scraped across the runway and caught fire, killing two 
teenagers and injuring 180 passengers, the investigators gave no indication of 
mechanical or external problems, suggesting the cockpit holds vital clues.

Official probes if rescuers ran over SFO crash victim 07 Jul 2013 Investigators 
said they were looking into the possibility that rescue crews ran over one of 
the two teenagers killed in the Boeing 777 crash on Saturday. Officials 
released the details without explaining why the pilots were flying so slow - or 
why rescue officials didn't see the girl. San Mateo County Coroner Robert 
Foucrault said senior San Francisco Fire Department officials notified him and 
his staff at the crash site on Saturday that one of the 16-year-olds may have 
been struck on the runaway.

Airport landing system off when plane crashed in San Francisco 07 Jul 2013 A 
navigation system that helps pilots make safe descents was turned off at San 
Francisco airport on Saturday when a South Korean airliner crashed and burned 
after undershooting the runway, officials said. The system, called Glide Path, 
is meant to help planes land in bad weather. It was clear and sunny, with light 
winds, when Asiana Flight 214 from Seoul, South Korea crashed just before noon, 
killing two passengers and injuring more than 100.

North Carolina redistricting maps upheld by 3-judge panel 08 Jul 2013 A 
three-judge panel has upheld the boundaries for North Carolina's legislative 
and congressional seats that were drawn by Republicans in 2011. The Superior 
Court judges ruled unanimously Monday in favor of the GOP legislative leaders 
whose chambers drew the maps by letting the boundaries stand. Democratic 
voters, civil rights groups and election advocates had sued over the lines, 
arguing they were racially biased.

Rick Perry not seeking re-election for governor 08 Jul 2013 Texas Gov. Rick 
Perry said Monday that he won't run for re-election next year for an 
unprecedented fourth full term in office. "The time has come to pass on the 
mantle of leadership," he said. The announcement by the Republican governor 
opens the door to speculation that Perry will make another bid for the White 
House, in 2016.

Spitzer Seeks Ballot for City Comptroller's Race 08 Jul 2013 Eliot Spitzer, who 
resigned as governor of New York five years ago amid a prostitution scandal 
Bush regime set-up, is re-entering political life, with a run for the citywide 
office of comptroller and a hope that voters have forgiven him his previous 
misconduct. In an interview, Mr. Spitzer, a Democrat, said that he believes he 
could make a big impact in the role, and is asking New Yorkers to give him a 
second chance. Mr. Spitzer, an aggressive watchdog over Wall Street when he 
served as attorney general, wants to overhaul the sometimes overlooked office 
into a more activist one, given the power the comptroller exercises over the 
city's pension funds and city spending.

*****
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CLG Editor-in-Chief: Lori Price. Copyright © 2013, Citizens for Legitimate 
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