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  • FILE: Workers installing larger bins for carry-on luggage on a Boeing 737 for American Airlines in Tulsa, Okla.AP

Fliers can stop sharpening their elbows. Overhead bins are getting bigger.

Packed planes and a high volume of carry-ons are forcing airlines to expand the space above passenger's heads. United and Delta are the latest airlines to replace or upgrade bins so they hold more luggage. And engineers at Boeing are designing jet interiors with today's bulkier luggage in mind.

It's a chance to placate passengers who feel like they're thrown into a roller derby every time they board a plane. Because of fees on checked bags, more passengers are bringing carry-ons, which are growing in size. And with planes more crowded than ever, bins fill up before everyone has reached their seat. Travelers fight physics and one another to shove one more bag overhead. Or they're forced to check luggage at the gate.

The result is upset travelers, harried flight attendants and delays.

The percentage of passengers bringing bags on board has hovered around 87 percent in recent years, United Continental says. And "the size of the carry-on has increased ... They are stretching the limits of their bags," says Scott O'Leary, managing director of customer solutions at United Continental Holdings Inc.

Expanding bins is a smart way for airlines to set themselves apart, says Henry Harteveldt, who leads airline and travel analysis at Atmosphere Research Group, a market research firm. "Especially if they cater to the business traveler, they're hoping it will give them a small but noticeable competitive advantage."

Business travelers, for example, avoid an airline that doesn't have room for their carry-ons.

At first blush, it might seem like airlines risk giving away fees if more people can fit carry-ons on board. But they're not risking much as it turns out.

Airlines often waive bag fees when luggage can't fit overhead and must be checked at the gate. And business travelers, who generate most of the industry's revenue, are often exempt from baggage fees anyway.

But will bigger bins encourage fliers to bring larger bags? Airlines hope not, and are trying to crack down before luggage makes it into the cabin.

Airlines expanding their bins include:

-United: The airline is replacing bin doors on 152 planes starting in April. The new doors curve out more than the old ones. That allows passengers to slide bags into the compartment wheels-first instead of sideways. The renovated bins will be on all of United's Airbus A320s, one of the main jets the airline uses for domestic flying. The planes will hold 106 typical roll-on bags, up from 64. The bins are also getting more rugged latches because latches on overstuffed bins are more likely to break.

Passengers on United's A320s have had to check their bags at a higher rate than travelers on other planes because there wasn't enough room. "That's a real sore point," O'Leary says.

-American Airlines: The airline's new 737s will hold 48 more bags than the planes they are replacing, although they have 24 more seats, too. That means more people and luggage. American's older 737s are also getting new baggage-bin doors that curve out more. The work is finished on about half of the 76 planes.

-Delta Air Lines: Passengers on international routes like Atlanta-Paris or Minneapolis-Amsterdam are starting to see new bins on the airline's 767 jets. The compartments hold 26 more bags than the bins they are replacing. It's an increase of 23 percent.

-US Airways Group Inc.: In 2008, it enlarged bins on its 757s, a mid-sized plane flown on routes including Phoenix to Hawaii and Charlotte, N.C., to Dublin. Like United, the change allowed fliers to slide bags in wheels-first instead of sideways. "We know it's a customer enhancement, and yeah, they like it," says US Airways spokeswoman Michelle Mohr.

Tim Kirkwood, a flight attendant for 35 years, remembers overhead bins that were basically open shelves for coats and hats. Now, leisure travelers trying to avoid a bag fee will bring as much as they can into the cabin.

"A bigger bin is good because at least more stuff will fit up there," says Kirkwood, who asked that his airline not be identified. "But it just seems to encourage them to bring more stuff."

Boeing wants its new planes to have the right bins for all that stuff.

The company is engineering its bins to be a better fit for a standard 9 x 14 x 22-inch roll-aboard bag. That's a change from the past. Designers used to focus on maximizing cubic inches. That produced impressive-sounding space that would be quoted in Boeing's sales materials. But it wasn't necessarily a good fit for actual carry-on luggage, says Kent Craver, Boeing's cabin expert.

"We never used to talk about how many bags would fit. We talked about volume," he says.

In designing bins on its new 787, Boeing dispatched workers to Costco and other stores to buy roll-aboard bags to make sure they would fit. The 787-8 holds 10 percent more carry-on bags than the larger 777, even though the volume inside the bins is about the same.

For passengers, "volume doesn't really matter. It's whether or not my bag fits," Craver says. And that's the number Boeing now shows in its sales materials.

The extra space also makes it more likely that bags will end up close to the passenger who brought them.

"They don't want it 20 rows behind them or 20 rows in front of them, because that causes a lot of anxiety," Craver says.

Bigger bins help. So would passengers who follow the rules about carry-on sizes.

Passengers with bigger-than-allowed bags might take bin space from others. It can be tough for airlines to enforce the rules with passengers who print their own boarding pass at home. That's because the first time an airline worker sees them is at the gate.

United is trying to be stricter about carry-on sizes. It has been running an experiment at a few airports, where agents are told to look out for bags that are too big or passengers who bring too many. Oversized bags are checked at the gate. As a result, there's more room to stow carry-ons. United declined to identify the airports.

American is also trying to be tougher about carry-on sizes. At every gate, it has installed new size-checking boxes with three hard sides. Bags either slide in or they don't. The old checkers had no walls, so it was easier to fudge. Airline spokesman Tim Smith says the new boxes act as an arbiter when customers deny that their carry-on is too bulky. American will check a bag for free at the gate if it's too big.

Emily Quinnell, who studies social work at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, had to check some small bags at the gate on a recent flight between Minneapolis and Denver. There was no room in the bins. She says airlines should have known that charging for luggage would cause passengers to push the limits of what they can bring on board.

"I'm not going to pay for it," she says. "I'm a student."



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Obama disagrees on calls for military action overseas

President Obama, showered with foreign policy questions at his first press conference of the year, defended his sanctions-heavy approach to Iran's nuclear program and urged the international community as well as lawmakers at home to give those penalties more time before considering military action. 

"Iran is feeling the bite of these sanctions in a substantial way," the president said Tuesday. 

Obama addressed Iran and other pressing international concerns amid a whirlwind of activity on that front. The United States and its allies are preparing to return to the negotiating table with Iran. The past few days in Washington have been consumed by talk of Iran, and the possibility of an Israel-led military strike, as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visits Capitol Hill. 

Obama warned Tuesday that a "casual" approach to war leads to "mistakes." And he stressed there is a "window of opportunity where this can still be resolved diplomatically." 

The president said he doesn't "expect a breakthrough" in the first meeting with Iran, but claimed the U.S. and its allies should have a sense "fairly quickly" about how serious Iran is about resolving the issue. 

"We will not countenance Iran getting a nuclear weapon," Obama said, repeating his message from his weekend speech to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. "My policy is not containment. My policy is to prevent them from creating a nuclear weapon," he said. 

Iran's nuclear ambitions were commanding attention in the aftermath of Obama's meeting Monday with Netanyahu. Tension over Iran has already contributed to higher oil prices, and Israel's threats of pre-emptive military strikes to prevent Tehran from building a nuclear bomb have dominated Washington discourse for weeks.

The president also said he disagreed with calls by several U.S. senators for the United States to launch airstrikes in Syria to protect the people of that country from Bashar Assad's regime. 

"For us to take military action unilaterally, as someone suggested, or to think that somehow there is some simple solution, I think is a mistake," Obama said, at his first press conference of the year. 

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a day earlier called for airstrikes in Syria. He was later joined by Sens. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. 

Obama also pitched new mortgage relief for members of the military as well as homeowners with government-insured loans. 

Obama announced plans to let borrowers with mortgages insured by the Federal Housing Administration refinance at lower rates, saving the average homeowner more than $1,000 a year. Obama also was detailing an agreement with major lenders to compensate service members and veterans who were wrongfully foreclosed upon or denied lower interest rates.

Obama is holding the news conference in the midst of a modestly improving economy. But international challenges as well as a stubbornly depressed housing market remain threats to the current recovery and to his presidency.

Obama has not held a full news conference since November. The White House scheduled this one on the same day as the 10-state Super Tuesday Republican presidential nominating contests. While aides insisted the timing was coincidental, it follows a pattern of Obama seeking the limelight when the attention is on the GOP.

The news conference comes amid a new sense of optimism at the White House. Obama's public approval ratings have inched up close to 50 percent. The president recently won an extension of a payroll tax cut that was a main element of his jobs plan for 2012. Economic signals suggest a recovery that is taking hold.

Still, he will probably face questions about the pace of the recovery. The unemployment rate in January was 8.3 percent, the highest it has been in an election year since the Great Depression. With rising gasoline prices threatening to slow the economy, Obama has also faced attacks from Republicans over his energy policy.

Under the housing plans Obama announced Tuesday, FHA-insured borrowers would be able to refinance their loans at half the fee that the FHA currently charges. FHA borrowers who want to refinance now must pay a fee of 1.15 percent of their balance every year. Officials say those fees make refinancing unappealing to many borrowers. The new plan will reduce that charge to 0.55 percent.

With mortgage rates at about 4 percent, the administration estimates a typical FHA borrower with $175,000 still owed on a home could reduce monthly payments to $915 a month and save $100 a month more than the borrower would have under current FHA fees.

Though 2 million to 3 million borrowers would be eligible, the administration official would not speculate how many would actually seek to benefit from the program. The FHA provides mortgage insurance on loans made by FHA-approved lenders throughout the United States and its territories. The loans typically go to homeowners who do not have enough equity to qualify for standard mortgages. It is the largest insurer of mortgages in the world.

For service members and veterans, under the plan major lenders would review foreclosures to determine whether they were done properly. If wrongly foreclosed upon, service members and veterans would be paid their lost equity and also be entitled to an additional $116,785 in compensation. That was a figure reached through an agreement with major lenders by the federal government and 49 state attorneys general.

Under the agreement, the lenders also would compensate service members who lost value in their homes when they were forced to sell them due to a military reassignment.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 



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Helping you prepare for doomsday: Small business finds a niche

Six members of the suspected computer hacking groups affiliated with Anonymous were charged -- including the suspected ring leader, who directed the entire operation from a Manhattan apartment complex -- after it was revealed one of the group's most high profile members has been working with federal authorities for months.

Hector Monsegur, a 28-year-old American believed to use the name "Sabu" on the internet, was arrested by federal agents last year and has been cooperating with law enforcement ever since, officials said. He pleaded guilty last August, a plea unsealed in federal court in Lower Manhattan today.

At least at least four of the five other members of the group were arrested recently based on information provided by Monsegur -- one in Chicago and three overseas, officials said. Each were charged with conspiracy and at least two will appear in federal court in Lower Manhattan later today.

Federal officials said they expect the arrests to seriously damage LulzSec, an underground group also known as Lulz Security, which is also an offset of the hacking group Anonymous.

Law enforcement sources told ABC News that the six people charged are allegedly among the most sophisticated hackers in the world. The FBI said motives for attacks varied -- for example an attack on credit card companies was based on the refusal by the firms to process contributions to the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks, and another attack was simply a way of mocking internet security. The investigation began with a tip last June, officials said.

The group and Anonymous have taken credit for carrying out a number of high-profile hacking actions against companies and institutions including the CIA's website, Britain's Serious Organized Crime Agency, Japan's Sony Corp and Mexican government websites.

Last month, Anonymous published a recording of a confidential call between FBI agents and London detectives in which the law-enforcement agents discuss action they are taking against hacking.

READ: Anonymous Listens in on FBI-Scotland Yard Hacking Call

Anonymous also claimed to be behind the electronic theft of thousands of internal documents from the private intelligence analysis firm Stratfor. In charging documents released today, federal officials said that the charged co-conspirators had stolen credit card information from Stratfor employees and clients and made some $700,000 in unauthorized charges.

Earlier this week, a Twitter account connected to Sabu continued to rant against federal agents, supposedly while he was working with them.

"The federal government is run by a bunch of f*****g cowards. Don't give in to these people. Fight back. Stay strong," a tweet from Monday reads.

While Anonymous and LulzSec by nature have no official hierarchy, the user known as Sabu was one of the most vocal and prominent members in online communities. Fox News first reported Monsegur's alleged involvement with the today's arrests.

ABC News' Jason Ryan, Mark Crudele and Lee Ferran contributed to this report.

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Special Forces soldier dies trying to save NC kids

By Rodrigo Campos

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks fell the most in nearly three months on Tuesday with the Dow tumbling more than 200 points as recent government data rekindled concerns about global growth and a deadline loomed for private holders of Greek debt to agree to hefty losses.

Volatility soared, with the CBOE Volatility Index or VIX <.VIX> on track to close above its 50-day average for the first time since November. More than a dozen stocks fell for every rising issue on the New York Stock Exchange, with bank and miner shares among the top decliners.

The recent gains in equities have been supported in part by expectations that Europe's credit crisis will be contained and China's economy will avoid a hard landing. Recent data seems to partly undermine those assumptions.

"The concern in the market is the realization that China is affected by Europe as much as anyone else is," said Art Hogan, managing director of Lazard Capital Markets in New York.

Europe's downturn appeared ready to turn into a full-fledged recession due to a collapse in household spending, exports and manufacturing in the final months of 2011, the European Union said.

Brazil's gross domestic product expanded by a meager 2.7 percent in 2011, data showed Tuesday, adding to concerns after China cut its growth outlook earlier in the week. Expected growth in emerging markets has been a main catalyst for equities' gains.

The Dow Jones industrial average (DJI:DJI) lost 204.57 points, or 1.58 percent, to 12,758.24. The S&P 500 Index <.INX> dropped 21.66 points, or 1.59 percent, to 1,342.67. The Nasdaq Composite (NAS:COMP) fell 43.27 points, or 1.47 percent, to 2,907.21.

Despite the decline, the S&P 500 is still up 7 percent for the year. If fourth-quarter gains are included, the benchmark index is still up almost 20 percent since September 30. Analysts have expected a pullback for weeks, citing an overstretched market.

A group representing bondholders warned a default could cause more than 1 trillion euros ($1.3 trillion) of damage to the region. Creditors have until Thursday night to accept a bond swap in which they would lose almost three-quarters of the value of their bonds.

"If there is not enough participation in that part of the deal, what we have can fall apart," Lazard's Hogan said.

As part of a reassessment of possible collateral damage if the Greek deal with private debt holders collapses, traders sold the stocks of large banks on concern about their exposure to Greece.

The S&P financial sector index <.GSPF> dropped 2.4 percent and the KBW bank index <.BKX> fell 2.7 percent. Morgan Stanley (NYS:MS) lost 5.3 percent to $17.32.

A gauge of European bank shares <.SX7P> tumbled 4.2 percent.

Greece has no plans to extend the deadline on its bond-swap offer to private creditors, officials said, dismissing market rumors that the date may be changed to increase participation in the offer.

Basic materials stocks were also hurt as commodity prices fell, pressured further by a stronger U.S. dollar.

Aluminum producer Alcoa Inc (NYS:AA) slid 4.2 pct to $9.47 and Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc (NYS:FCX) lost 2.9 percent to $39.28.

The CRB commodities index <.CRB> fell 1.4 percent, down for a third straight session.

(Reporting by Rodrigo Campos; Editing by Jan Paschal)



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Caribbean playboy found guilty in Ponzi scheme

RT @SarahH_CBSNJ: Newt reinforces his support for NASA at Space Camp: http://t.co/taGQRYkY

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Two companies accused of fleecing U.S. troops

Rep. Donald Payne, a New Jersey Democrat first elected to Congress in 1988, has died after a battle with colon cancer. He was 77.

Payne just went public with his illness last month. At the time, he vowed to fight the disease, saying his doctors “expect my full recovery, as do I.” But as his condition deteriorated, he was flown from Washington to New Jersey in early March on a medical transport.

He passed away on Tuesday, according to news reports confirmed by a congressional aide.

The flags above the Capitol were ordered to be lowered to half-mast, as tributes to the longtime congressman poured in.

President Obama said in a statement that he and first lady Michelle Obama were “saddened” by Payne's passing. “By any standard, Don lived a full and meaningful life,” he said.

Payne has represented northeastern New Jersey with few significant challengers for more than two decades. In his last race, he won 85 percent of the vote in the general election after going unopposed in the primary â€" and that was his closest contest since 2002.

He was a former chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus. More recently, he led the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, the group's philanthropic wing. He was also the first African American member of Congress from New Jersey.

“Donald Payne was a true trailblazer,” said Rep. Bill Pascrell, Jr , D-N.J., in a statement.

Payne was long active in foreign affairs and was the ranking Democrat on the Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, and Human Rights. In 2003, President George W. Bush named Payne one of two congressional delegates to the United Nations. And in 2009, he gained notoriety after an airplane he was on came under fire while leaving Somalia en route to Kenya. Payne later said he was unaware of the attack until they landed.

Rep. Howard Berman, D-Calif., the ranking member on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, hailed Payne as “a champion for the underserved, a voice for the downtrodden, a leader for peoples and causes that are too often neglected.”

“With wisdom and charm, insight and steadfastness, Don Payne distinguished himself as a leader on many important issues, but particularly related to Africa,” Berman said.

According to the biography on his Web site, Payne is survived by one great grandchild, four grandchildren and three children. Among them is his son, Donald Payne Jr., currently the president of the Newark Municipal Council.



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President Obama: ‘I don\'t know what\'s in Rush Limbaugh\'s heart\'

The FBI today offered a $1 million reward for information leading to the safe return of former agent Robert Levinson, who disappeared in Iran on a business trip five years ago this week and is thought to be held hostage there.

Levinson's wife of 37 years, Christine Levinson, and FBI Director Robert Mueller announced the reward at a Washington press conference this morning. The FBI also said it would put up billboards with pictures of Levinson in Afghanistan, Pakistan and elsewhere in the region.

"Today we stand together to reaffirm our commitment to Bob Levinson," said Mueller. "We in the FBI will continue to do all that we can to ensure Bob's safe return, his safe return to Christine and their family, his safe return to the FBI family, and to the country that he has served so well and so diligently for over 28 years."

Christine Levinson said "there are no words to describe the nightmare that my family and I have been living every day. I never imagined that we would still be waiting for Bob to come home five years later."

Robert Levinson, a former FBI Special Agent, vanished from Kish Island, Iran, on March 9, 2007, and was thought to be dead until a "proof-of-life" video surfaced in late 2011, the first sign since his disappearance that he is still alive. In the video, posted by his family on their website, a gaunt Levinson addresses "my beautiful, my loving, my loyal wife Christine," says he is being held hostage, and warns that his diabetes medication is running out.

"I am not in very good health," says Levinson.

He does not name his captors but pleads for the United States to deal with them.

"I need the help of the United States government to answer the requests of the group that has held me for three and a half years," he says, wearing a thin shirt and sitting on the floor in front of a rock facing.

Levinson reportedly visited the resort island as a private investigator on behalf of a documentary producer. He had planned to meet with an American fugitive accused of murdering a former Iranian official and was last seen checking into a hotel arranged for the meeting. U.S. officials reported that he was not acting in any way as part of the U.S. government or its agencies.

U.S. officials presumed Mr. Levinson dead prior to the hostage video, which was sent anonymously to his family's Pakistan and Afghanistan e-mail accounts. Other than the video, the captors have made no effort to contact either the family or U.S. officials.

Iran has repeatedly denied any knowledge of his whereabouts or the identity of his captors. However the U.S. State Department, which has continued pressing Iran for relevant information, believes Iranian officials know more than they have shared. U.S. officials also think Levinson may be held in the border region of Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The family posted on their website Thursday, imploring the public to "generate as much press coverage around the five year anniversary of the kidnapping" as possible. They ask individuals to utilize Facebook to spread the message of their case.

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Mr. Levinson retired from the FBI ten years before his disappearance to work for a private investigation firm. He is the father of 7 children.

"We will never give up hope, " says a statement on the family's website, "and every day we pray that today will be the day that our father will be released and allowed to return to the loving arms of his family."

"We often speak of the FBI family, and though he is retired from the FBI, Bob remains a member of the FBI family to this day," said Mueller. "It is our privilege to stand with the Levinson family for as long as it takes to bring Bob home."

Click Here for the Blotter Homepage.

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Navy Develops \'Spidey Sense\'

Conflicting reports have surfaced on the cause of reality star Tila Tequila's alleged recent hospitalization, ranging from a brain aneurysm to a drug overdose to a suicide attempt.

According to a report from Radar Online, the “Shot at Love With Tila Tequila” star was recovering Monday after spending a week in the hospital following a brain aneurysm, which sources say caused her to “think irrationally” and ingest “two bottles of unspecified heavy prescription drugs.”

“She was in two hospitals for the span of a week and is still not in perfect health, so she is going to check into an outpatient program,” a source told Radar.

According to Radar, friends say Tila suffered the aneurysm in the middle of the night. After allegedly ingesting the pills, she “threw up all over her bed after overdosing and felt like she was dying.,” a source said. “She was screaming for help, and in desperation, broke her bedroom window and attempted to jump out.”

“Finally a friend came over after getting a strange text from her and found her convulsing on the bed,” Radar quotes a source as saying. “He called an ambulance and she was taken to the hospital.”

She reportedly remained in intensive care all week , dropping down to just 78 pounds and potentially suffering “some permanent brain damage,” Radar reported.

But according to TMZ, at the time of her reported hospitalization, Tequila â€" whose real name is Tila Nguyen â€" had been trying to “kill herself all week.”

According to TMZ, last Wednesday, her roommate called 911 and said the reality star was trying to kill herself.

Law enforcement sources reportedly told TMZ that emergency responders came to the hospital at 1:30 a.m. Wednesday and brought Tequila to a hospital in Burbank, California.

Sources reportedly told TMZ that Tequila was drifting in and out of consciousness in the house and was in need of psychiatric help.

TMZ reports that she was released the same day. But last night, her manager reportedly called 911 again, fearing the star was in danger.

Cops reportedly went to the house Monday night, and Tequila did not answer the door,” TMZ reports. She later reportedly called 911 to find out why the cops were there, and allegedly told authorities she could not answer the door because she was in a wheelchair.

TMZ reports that she is home resting.

Radar cites sources who claim that the star is still facing major health problems and “still can't fully speak properly.”

Tequila's rep told the website HollywoodLife.com that she “continues to recover and is doing better. We ask that her privacy is respected during this difficult time.”



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Incumbents point to Toledo success story

HOUSTON (Reuters) - Allen Stanford was convicted on Tuesday of running a $7 billion Ponzi scheme, a verdict that caps a riches-to-rags trajectory for the former Texas financier and Caribbean playboy.

It was a vindication for the U.S. government, which closed down Stanford's financial empire in February 2009 but had failed for years to address signs that the empire was built on air. The Stanford case was the biggest financial fraud since Bernard Madoff's.

Stanford was found guilty on 13 counts of a 14-count criminal indictment, including fraud, conspiracy and obstructing an investigation by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. He was found not guilty on one count of wire fraud. The charges carry a possible prison sentence of nearly 20 years.

The verdict came less than a day after a Houston federal jury said it could not reach a verdict, and U.S. District Judge David Hittner instructed jurors to keep deliberating.

Still, the verdict may prove only a moral victory for Stanford's victims, most of whom have received none of their money back.

Stanford's personal fortune was once valued at $2.2 billion.

During a six-week trial, prosecutors told how Stanford, 61, repeatedly raided the bank he owned in Antigua, Stanford International Bank, using it as his "personal ATM."

He bought a castle in Florida for one of his girlfriends and his oldest daughter lived in a million-dollar condominium in Houston. He wore custom-made suits, lived in luxury homes and on a yacht in the Caribbean and bankrolled a $20 million prize for an international cricket tournament.

The government's star witness, former Stanford aide James Davis, testified that he and Stanford faked documents and made up financial reports to calm investors and fool regulators. They funneled millions of dollars from Stanford International Bank to a secret Swiss bank account that Stanford tapped for his personal use, Davis testified.

Davis, 63, has pleaded guilty to three criminal counts.

Stanford's lawyers portrayed their client as a visionary who was not involved in his firm's daily activities. They blamed Davis for any fraud and argued that Stanford's businesses were viable until the government shut down Stanford Financial Group in Houston in February 2009. Left with no money, Stanford was declared indigent by the court and his defense was paid for with public funds.

(Reporting by Anna Driver and Eileen O'Grady; Editing by Martha Graybow and Matthew Lewis)



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Scientists point to the moon to explain Titanic sinking

SAN ANTONIO (Reuters) - A century after the Titanic disaster, scientists have found an unexpected culprit of the crash: the moon.

Anyone who knows history or blockbuster movies knows that the cause of the ocean liner's accident 100 years ago next month was that it hit an iceberg.

"But the lunar connection may explain how an unusually large number of icebergs got into the path of the Titanic," said Donald Olson, a Texas State University physicist whose team of forensic astronomers examined the moon's role.

Ever since the Titanic sank in the early morning of April 15, 1912, killing 1,517 people, researchers have puzzled over Captain Edward Smith's seeming disregard of warnings that icebergs were in the area where the ship was sailing.

Smith was the most experienced captain in the White Star Line and had sailed the North Atlantic sea lanes on numerous occasions. He had been assigned to the maiden voyage of the Titanic because he was a knowledgeable and careful seaman.

Greenland icebergs of the type that the Titanic struck generally become stuck in the shallow waters off Labrador and Newfoundland, and cannot resume moving southward until they have melted enough to re-float or a high tide frees them, Olson said.

So how was it that such a large number of icebergs had floated so far south that they were in the shipping lanes well south of Newfoundland that night?

The team investigated speculation by the late oceanographer Fergus Wood that an unusually close approach by the moon in January 1912 may have produced such high tides that far more icebergs than usual managed to separate from Greenland, and floated, still fully grown, into shipping lanes that had been moved south that spring because of reports of icebergs.

Olson said a "once-in-many-lifetimes" event occurred on January 4, 1912, when the moon and sun lined up in such a way that their gravitational pulls enhanced each other. At the same time, the moon's closest approach to earth that January was the closest in 1,400 years, and the point of closest approach occurred within six minutes of the full moon. On top of that, the Earth's closest approach to the sun in a year had happened just the previous day.

"This configuration maximized the moon's tide-raising forces on the Earth's oceans," Olson said. "That's remarkable."

His research determined that to reach the shipping lanes by mid-April, the iceberg that the Titanic struck must have broken off from Greenland in January 1912. The high tide caused by the bizarre combination of astronomical events would have been enough to dislodge icebergs and give them enough buoyancy to reach the shipping lanes by April, he said.

Olson's team has sought to use tide patterns to determine exactly when Julius Caesar invaded Britain and prove the legend that Mary Shelley was inspired by a bright full moon shining through her window to write the gothic classic "Frankenstein."

The team's Titanic research may have vindicated Captain Smith - albeit a century too late - by showing that he had a good excuse to react so casually to a report of ice in the ship's path. He had no reason at the time to believe that the bergs he was facing were as numerous or as large as they turned out to be, Olson said.

"In astronomical terms, the odds of all these variables lining up in just the way they did was, well, astronomical," he said.

The research will appear in the April issue of "Sky & Telescope" magazine.

(Reporting By Jim Forsyth; Editing by Corrie MacLaggan and Paul Thomasch)



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  • FILE: Workers installing larger bins for carry-on luggage on a Boeing 737 for American Airlines in Tulsa, Okla.AP

Fliers can stop sharpening their elbows. Overhead bins are getting bigger.

Packed planes and a high volume of carry-ons are forcing airlines to expand the space above passenger's heads. United and Delta are the latest airlines to replace or upgrade bins so they hold more luggage. And engineers at Boeing are designing jet interiors with today's bulkier luggage in mind.

It's a chance to placate passengers who feel like they're thrown into a roller derby every time they board a plane. Because of fees on checked bags, more passengers are bringing carry-ons, which are growing in size. And with planes more crowded than ever, bins fill up before everyone has reached their seat. Travelers fight physics and one another to shove one more bag overhead. Or they're forced to check luggage at the gate.

The result is upset travelers, harried flight attendants and delays.

The percentage of passengers bringing bags on board has hovered around 87 percent in recent years, United Continental says. And "the size of the carry-on has increased ... They are stretching the limits of their bags," says Scott O'Leary, managing director of customer solutions at United Continental Holdings Inc.

Expanding bins is a smart way for airlines to set themselves apart, says Henry Harteveldt, who leads airline and travel analysis at Atmosphere Research Group, a market research firm. "Especially if they cater to the business traveler, they're hoping it will give them a small but noticeable competitive advantage."

Business travelers, for example, avoid an airline that doesn't have room for their carry-ons.

At first blush, it might seem like airlines risk giving away fees if more people can fit carry-ons on board. But they're not risking much as it turns out.

Airlines often waive bag fees when luggage can't fit overhead and must be checked at the gate. And business travelers, who generate most of the industry's revenue, are often exempt from baggage fees anyway.

But will bigger bins encourage fliers to bring larger bags? Airlines hope not, and are trying to crack down before luggage makes it into the cabin.

Airlines expanding their bins include:

-United: The airline is replacing bin doors on 152 planes starting in April. The new doors curve out more than the old ones. That allows passengers to slide bags into the compartment wheels-first instead of sideways. The renovated bins will be on all of United's Airbus A320s, one of the main jets the airline uses for domestic flying. The planes will hold 106 typical roll-on bags, up from 64. The bins are also getting more rugged latches because latches on overstuffed bins are more likely to break.

Passengers on United's A320s have had to check their bags at a higher rate than travelers on other planes because there wasn't enough room. "That's a real sore point," O'Leary says.

-American Airlines: The airline's new 737s will hold 48 more bags than the planes they are replacing, although they have 24 more seats, too. That means more people and luggage. American's older 737s are also getting new baggage-bin doors that curve out more. The work is finished on about half of the 76 planes.

-Delta Air Lines: Passengers on international routes like Atlanta-Paris or Minneapolis-Amsterdam are starting to see new bins on the airline's 767 jets. The compartments hold 26 more bags than the bins they are replacing. It's an increase of 23 percent.

-US Airways Group Inc.: In 2008, it enlarged bins on its 757s, a mid-sized plane flown on routes including Phoenix to Hawaii and Charlotte, N.C., to Dublin. Like United, the change allowed fliers to slide bags in wheels-first instead of sideways. "We know it's a customer enhancement, and yeah, they like it," says US Airways spokeswoman Michelle Mohr.

Tim Kirkwood, a flight attendant for 35 years, remembers overhead bins that were basically open shelves for coats and hats. Now, leisure travelers trying to avoid a bag fee will bring as much as they can into the cabin.

"A bigger bin is good because at least more stuff will fit up there," says Kirkwood, who asked that his airline not be identified. "But it just seems to encourage them to bring more stuff."

Boeing wants its new planes to have the right bins for all that stuff.

The company is engineering its bins to be a better fit for a standard 9 x 14 x 22-inch roll-aboard bag. That's a change from the past. Designers used to focus on maximizing cubic inches. That produced impressive-sounding space that would be quoted in Boeing's sales materials. But it wasn't necessarily a good fit for actual carry-on luggage, says Kent Craver, Boeing's cabin expert.

"We never used to talk about how many bags would fit. We talked about volume," he says.

In designing bins on its new 787, Boeing dispatched workers to Costco and other stores to buy roll-aboard bags to make sure they would fit. The 787-8 holds 10 percent more carry-on bags than the larger 777, even though the volume inside the bins is about the same.

For passengers, "volume doesn't really matter. It's whether or not my bag fits," Craver says. And that's the number Boeing now shows in its sales materials.

The extra space also makes it more likely that bags will end up close to the passenger who brought them.

"They don't want it 20 rows behind them or 20 rows in front of them, because that causes a lot of anxiety," Craver says.

Bigger bins help. So would passengers who follow the rules about carry-on sizes.

Passengers with bigger-than-allowed bags might take bin space from others. It can be tough for airlines to enforce the rules with passengers who print their own boarding pass at home. That's because the first time an airline worker sees them is at the gate.

United is trying to be stricter about carry-on sizes. It has been running an experiment at a few airports, where agents are told to look out for bags that are too big or passengers who bring too many. Oversized bags are checked at the gate. As a result, there's more room to stow carry-ons. United declined to identify the airports.

American is also trying to be tougher about carry-on sizes. At every gate, it has installed new size-checking boxes with three hard sides. Bags either slide in or they don't. The old checkers had no walls, so it was easier to fudge. Airline spokesman Tim Smith says the new boxes act as an arbiter when customers deny that their carry-on is too bulky. American will check a bag for free at the gate if it's too big.

Emily Quinnell, who studies social work at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, had to check some small bags at the gate on a recent flight between Minneapolis and Denver. There was no room in the bins. She says airlines should have known that charging for luggage would cause passengers to push the limits of what they can bring on board.

"I'm not going to pay for it," she says. "I'm a student."



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Mom loses legs after saving kids from tornado- Sales of storm shelters rise after deadly twisters

Eight current and former members of the U.S. military allege in a new federal lawsuit that they were raped, assaulted or harassed during their service and suffered retaliation when they reported it to their superiors.

The lawsuit, being filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Washington, accuses the military of a having a “high tolerance for sexual predators in their ranks” and of fostering a hostile environment that discourages victims of sexual assault from coming forward and punishes them when they do. The suit says the Defense Department has failed to take aggressive steps to confront the problem despite public statements suggesting otherwise.

The eight women include an active-duty enlisted Marine and seven veterans of the Navy and Marine Corps. Seven women allege that a comrade raped or tried to sexually assault them, including in a commanding officer's office after a pub crawl in Washington and inside a Navy barracks room in Florida. The eighth says she was harassed and threatened while deployed overseas, only to be told by a superior that “this happens all the time.”

The women say they've suffered depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder because of the assaults. One woman says she tried to commit suicide after being raped inside her row home by a senior officer and his civilian friend.

The lawsuit names as defendants past and present military leaders, including Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and his predecessors.

Defense Department spokeswoman Cynthia Smith said she could not discuss pending litigation, but said the military has no tolerance for sexual assault. Under a policy announced in December, service members who report a sexual assault have the option of quickly transferring their unit or installation.

She said the department has also increased funding for investigators and judge advocates to receive specialized training in sexual assault cases, is assembling a data system to track reports of sexual assault and is reviewing how commanding officers are trained in preventing and responding to rape cases.

“It is important that everyone in uniform be alert to the problem and have the leadership training to help prevent these crimes,” Smith said in a written statement.

A Navy spokeswoman, Lt. Cmdr. Alana Garas, said the Navy has developed an education and training program on sexual assault reporting.

Ariana Klay, a former Marine Corps officer and plaintiff who says she was raped in August 2010, said the military avoids scrutiny for its handling of these accusations by projecting a warrior culture and because the public doesn't want to believe these crimes and cover-ups are occurring among service members.

“A noble cause is a great vehicle for corruption because nobody wants to look and nobody is going to look,” Klay said.

After serving in Iraq, Klay was recruited to Military Barracks Washington in the nation's capital, where she says she was falsely accused of adultery, taunted as a “slut” and “whore” and told to “deal with it” by a superior. She said the situation became so uncomfortable that she requested a deployment to Afghanistan, but that request was denied because she was told she was too critical to the command. Klay alleges she was raped inside her row house near the barracks on the morning of Aug. 28, 2010, by a senior officer and a civilian friend.

Klay said she reported the rapes and left the barracks, but was told she must have invited the harassment because of her clothing. She says one of her alleged attackers was ultimately court-martialed, but was judged guilty of lesser offenses of indecent language and adultery. She became so despondent amid the retaliation that she attempted suicide, she said.

Another plaintiff, Elle Helmer, who says she was told she got a public affairs position at the Marine Barracks because she was considered the “prettiest,” reported being sexually assaulted by a commanding officer following a St. Patrick's Day pub crawl in Washington's Capitol Hill in 2006. She says she was discouraged from submitting to a rape kit and medical examination, was told she needed to toughen up and was investigated for public intoxication and conduct unbecoming. She left the Marine Corps soon after.

“It took approximately 72 hours for the victim to become the accused in this example, and that was really the beginning of the Spanish Inquisition,” Helmer said.

Although The Associated Press normally does not identify the victims of sexual assault, Klay and Helmer agreed to publicly discuss their case.

“Are they saying we're all lying? Are they saying it doesn't happen? Hiding behind their rhetoric of zero tolerance is entirely cowardly and misleading and they know it,” Helmer said.



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URGENT: Financer Stanford convicted on 13 counts

A Houston jury has convicted Texas financier R. Allen Stanford on all but one of the charges he faced for allegedly bilking investors out of more than $7 billion in one of the largest Ponzi schemes in U.S. history.

The federal jurors found Stanford guilty on 13 of 14 counts he faced. They found Stanford not guilty on one count of wire fraud.

The 61-year-old Stanford looked down when the verdict was read.

He faces up to 20 years in prison for the most serious charges but could be imprisoned for much longer if a judge orders his sentences be served consecutively.

Prosecutors say Stanford orchestrated a 20-year scheme that took billions through the sale of certificates of deposit from his Caribbean bank.

Stanford's attorneys blamed his ex-chief financial officer.



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F.B.I. offers $1 million for ex-agent who vanished in Iran

The FBI today offered a $1 million reward for information leading to the safe return of former agent Robert Levinson, who disappeared in Iran on a business trip five years ago this week and is thought to be held hostage there.

Levinson's wife of 37 years, Christine Levinson, and FBI Director Robert Mueller announced the reward at a Washington press conference this morning. The FBI also said it would put up billboards with pictures of Levinson in Afghanistan, Pakistan and elsewhere in the region.

"Today we stand together to reaffirm our commitment to Bob Levinson," said Mueller. "We in the FBI will continue to do all that we can to ensure Bob's safe return, his safe return to Christine and their family, his safe return to the FBI family, and to the country that he has served so well and so diligently for over 28 years."

Christine Levinson said "there are no words to describe the nightmare that my family and I have been living every day. I never imagined that we would still be waiting for Bob to come home five years later."

Robert Levinson, a former FBI Special Agent, vanished from Kish Island, Iran, on March 9, 2007, and was thought to be dead until a "proof-of-life" video surfaced in late 2011, the first sign since his disappearance that he is still alive. In the video, posted by his family on their website, a gaunt Levinson addresses "my beautiful, my loving, my loyal wife Christine," says he is being held hostage, and warns that his diabetes medication is running out.

"I am not in very good health," says Levinson.

He does not name his captors but pleads for the United States to deal with them.

"I need the help of the United States government to answer the requests of the group that has held me for three and a half years," he says, wearing a thin shirt and sitting on the floor in front of a rock facing.

Levinson reportedly visited the resort island as a private investigator on behalf of a documentary producer. He had planned to meet with an American fugitive accused of murdering a former Iranian official and was last seen checking into a hotel arranged for the meeting. U.S. officials reported that he was not acting in any way as part of the U.S. government or its agencies.

U.S. officials presumed Mr. Levinson dead prior to the hostage video, which was sent anonymously to his family's Pakistan and Afghanistan e-mail accounts. Other than the video, the captors have made no effort to contact either the family or U.S. officials.

Iran has repeatedly denied any knowledge of his whereabouts or the identity of his captors. However the U.S. State Department, which has continued pressing Iran for relevant information, believes Iranian officials know more than they have shared. U.S. officials also think Levinson may be held in the border region of Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The family posted on their website Thursday, imploring the public to "generate as much press coverage around the five year anniversary of the kidnapping" as possible. They ask individuals to utilize Facebook to spread the message of their case.

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Mr. Levinson retired from the FBI ten years before his disappearance to work for a private investigation firm. He is the father of 7 children.

"We will never give up hope, " says a statement on the family's website, "and every day we pray that today will be the day that our father will be released and allowed to return to the loving arms of his family."

"We often speak of the FBI family, and though he is retired from the FBI, Bob remains a member of the FBI family to this day," said Mueller. "It is our privilege to stand with the Levinson family for as long as it takes to bring Bob home."

Click Here for the Blotter Homepage.

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8 current, ex-service members to sue military, alleging sexual assault, harassment

Eight current and former members of the U.S. military allege in a new federal lawsuit that they were raped, assaulted or harassed during their service and suffered retaliation when they reported it to their superiors.

The lawsuit, being filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Washington, accuses the military of a having a “high tolerance for sexual predators in their ranks” and of fostering a hostile environment that discourages victims of sexual assault from coming forward and punishes them when they do. The suit says the Defense Department has failed to take aggressive steps to confront the problem despite public statements suggesting otherwise.

The eight women include an active-duty enlisted Marine and seven veterans of the Navy and Marine Corps. Seven women allege that a comrade raped or tried to sexually assault them, including in a commanding officer's office after a pub crawl in Washington and inside a Navy barracks room in Florida. The eighth says she was harassed and threatened while deployed overseas, only to be told by a superior that “this happens all the time.”

The women say they've suffered depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder because of the assaults. One woman says she tried to commit suicide after being raped inside her row home by a senior officer and his civilian friend.

The lawsuit names as defendants past and present military leaders, including Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and his predecessors.

Defense Department spokeswoman Cynthia Smith said she could not discuss pending litigation, but said the military has no tolerance for sexual assault. Under a policy announced in December, service members who report a sexual assault have the option of quickly transferring their unit or installation.

She said the department has also increased funding for investigators and judge advocates to receive specialized training in sexual assault cases, is assembling a data system to track reports of sexual assault and is reviewing how commanding officers are trained in preventing and responding to rape cases.

“It is important that everyone in uniform be alert to the problem and have the leadership training to help prevent these crimes,” Smith said in a written statement.

A Navy spokeswoman, Lt. Cmdr. Alana Garas, said the Navy has developed an education and training program on sexual assault reporting.

Ariana Klay, a former Marine Corps officer and plaintiff who says she was raped in August 2010, said the military avoids scrutiny for its handling of these accusations by projecting a warrior culture and because the public doesn't want to believe these crimes and cover-ups are occurring among service members.

“A noble cause is a great vehicle for corruption because nobody wants to look and nobody is going to look,” Klay said.

After serving in Iraq, Klay was recruited to Military Barracks Washington in the nation's capital, where she says she was falsely accused of adultery, taunted as a “slut” and “whore” and told to “deal with it” by a superior. She said the situation became so uncomfortable that she requested a deployment to Afghanistan, but that request was denied because she was told she was too critical to the command. Klay alleges she was raped inside her row house near the barracks on the morning of Aug. 28, 2010, by a senior officer and a civilian friend.

Klay said she reported the rapes and left the barracks, but was told she must have invited the harassment because of her clothing. She says one of her alleged attackers was ultimately court-martialed, but was judged guilty of lesser offenses of indecent language and adultery. She became so despondent amid the retaliation that she attempted suicide, she said.

Another plaintiff, Elle Helmer, who says she was told she got a public affairs position at the Marine Barracks because she was considered the “prettiest,” reported being sexually assaulted by a commanding officer following a St. Patrick's Day pub crawl in Washington's Capitol Hill in 2006. She says she was discouraged from submitting to a rape kit and medical examination, was told she needed to toughen up and was investigated for public intoxication and conduct unbecoming. She left the Marine Corps soon after.

“It took approximately 72 hours for the victim to become the accused in this example, and that was really the beginning of the Spanish Inquisition,” Helmer said.

Although The Associated Press normally does not identify the victims of sexual assault, Klay and Helmer agreed to publicly discuss their case.

“Are they saying we're all lying? Are they saying it doesn't happen? Hiding behind their rhetoric of zero tolerance is entirely cowardly and misleading and they know it,” Helmer said.



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Allen Stanford found guilty in Ponzi scheme case

HOUSTON (Reuters) - Allen Stanford was found guilty of conspiracy and fraud charges by a federal jury on Tuesday for leading a $7 billion Ponzi scheme from his offshore bank in Antigua.

A jury of eight men and four women found Stanford, whose net worth was once estimated at more than $2 billion, guilty on 13 counts of a 14-count criminal indictment.

(Reporting By Anna Driver and Eileen O'Grady)



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81-year-old woman wins $336.4M Powerball jackpot

An 81-year-old woman from Newport won last month's $336.4 million Powerball jackpot, sleeping with the winning ticket in her Bible until coming forward to claim the sixth-largest U.S. prize on Tuesday, a family representative said.

"I wanted to say that I am very happy and I'm very proud and this will make my family very happy," White reportedly said during a news conference Tuesday at state lottery headquarters in Cranston. "We are truly blessed. Thank you." 

White's attorneys said she was a regular lottery player who bought the winning ticket at a Stop & Shop supermarket in Newport where she had stopped for rainbow sherbet. The ticket is being claimed in the name of the Rainbow Sherbet Trust.

White kept the winning ticket in a Bible after she realized she won, the attorneys said.

The winning ticket was among three tickets with random numbers purchased on a $9 wager, officials said.

The winning numbers from the Feb. 11 drawing were 1-10-37-52-57 and the Powerball was 11. The lump sum payment would be $210 million, the highest ever for Powerball, officials said. The jackpot was the third largest in Powerball history and the largest ever won in Rhode Island, officials said.

The top lottery jackpot in U.S. history was a $390 million Mega Millions prize won in March 2007.

The Powerball jackpot win is the first since the ticket price increased from $1 to $2 in January. Rising sales nearly doubled the jackpot from $173.5 million on Feb. 1.

There is no bonus for the supermarket for selling the winning ticket, officials said. Instead of paying out a bonus, Powerball retailers in Rhode Island get eight cents on the dollar for every ticket sold.

The win means Rhode Island gets a little more than $12 million in taxes on the prize, officials said last month.

Powerball is played in 42 states, Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The chance of matching all five numbers and the Powerball number is about 1 in 175 million.

Click for more on this story from WPRI.com.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 



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Marines, Sailors to ReceiveRandom Breathalyzer Tests

The U.S. Navy will start giving breathalyzer tests to Marines and sailors reporting for duty aboard ships and submarines and at squadrons, Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus announced Monday in a worldwide call to forces.

The testing is part of a new 21st Century Sailor and Marine initiative -- a multi-prong program aimed at reinforcing healthy lifestyles both on and off-duty. The program emphasizes healthy lifestyles through nutrition, responsible alcohol consumption, zero tolerance for drug use and fitness programs as well as suicide prevention, family and personal preparedness and financial planning.

Not only will sailors reporting for duty watch have to submit to alcohol testing, random breathalyzers will be done elsewhere "to reduce the occurrence of alcohol-related incidents that can end careers and sometimes end lives," the Navy confirmed to Fox News.

"This is not done to punish, but to help. We want to help sailors and Marines make good choices before something happens that can't be undone," Mabus said during remarks given aboard the USS Bataan in Norfolk, Va., which were televised and web-streamed live to the fleet.

Mabus said the goal is to maximize readiness, fitness and safety.

"When a sailor's or Marine's time in the military ends whether it is after four years or 40, we want your productive life to continue and for you to leave the service in better health, more trained and better educated than when you came in," he said.

Alcohol screening equipment will be installed onboard ships throughout the year. The Marine Corps also will begin testing among selected units beginning in April. 

According to Federal News Radio, a senior Navy official said the breathalyzer tests would be non-punitive nor legally admissible, and is intended to let commanders of individual vessels get a heads-up about potential alcohol-related problems.

The Navy-wide alcohol testing plan reportedly comes after a successful pilot program in the Pacific submarine force in which alcohol related-incidents reportedly dropped by 45 percent after the tests began. In discussing the initiative, the Navy reported that alcohol-related motor vehicle fatalities are also down.

Federal News Radio reported that currently around 180 sailors per month are charged with DUI across the fleet.

The Navy is also beginning random testing of urine samples for chemical compounds like Spice, which is a synthetic marijuana, and will have a contractor conduct in-house testing until the Navy Drug Screening Lab is equipped to handle the new workload. This comes after the lab last month announced that it would undertake more prescription drug testing to look for commonly abused prescription drugs.

All positive drug results will be sent to the Naval Criminal Investigative Service and those found to have positive urinalysis results and wrongful possession of synthetic chemical compounds will be punished under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

"We have a professional and a moral obligation to lead, to train, to equip and to motivate," said Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Jonathan Greenert.

While emphasizing physical fitness in the "healthy mind, healthy body" mode, the Navy is also adopting a "Fueled to Fight" program fleetwide to provide a "nutrition strategy" to improve performance. 

The Navy is also aiming to become a 100 percent voluntarily smoke-free force by offering tools to quit and ending discounts for cigarettes in Navy and Marine Corps exchanges so prices rise to off-base sales. 

While the Navy boasted improved safety last year, the new program aims to get sailors and Marines to "apply the same operational risk management skills to their off-duty activities."

"All leaders must guard against reckless behavior -- it jeopardizes the health, safety, and combat readiness of our entire force" said Gen. James F. Amos, commandant of the Marine Corps. "Risk mitigation is one of the best means available as we fight to eliminate senseless and needless loss of life and injury, both on duty and on liberty."

The Navy added that all personnel should "expect to work in a safe environment, free from harassment or hazards, and when confronted with these, have the resources available to immediately correct the problem."

To encourage women sailors of childbearing age to stay in the service, the initiative also will give new mothers12-month deferments from operational assignments.

The Navy is also setting up a new diversity office "committed to attracting, mentoring and retaining the most talented men and women who bring a diversity of background, culture and skill in service to our nation."

"We want to have a force that's ready fit and healthy, both professionally and on a personal level," Navy Spokesman Cdr. Brenda Malone told Fox News.



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U.N. says also has video of Syrian hospital torture

A video shot in secret shows wounded, blindfolded men were chained to beds. A rubber whip and electrical cable lay on a table in one of the wards.

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Should iPad 2 Owners Sell?

Should iPad 2 Owners Sell?
Should iPad 2 Owners Sell?



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Tennessee professor tries to drive across U.S. on 10 gallons of gas

Specialist trader Joseph Dreyer of Knight Capital works at the post that trades Carnival Cruise lines on the floor of the New York Stock ExchangeNew numbers seem to show Europe's downturn is ready to turn into a full-fledged recession.




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2 arrested for allegedly plotting shooting at former high school over Facebook

Two Massachusetts men were arrested Monday after allegedly discussing on Facebook how they would carry out a Columbine-style shooting at their former high school, MyFoxBoston.com reported.

Natick Sands, 18, and Ryan Ringuette, 20, both of Attleboro, were arrested following an investigation by police and school officials. Both face charges of threatened use of a dangerous weapon at Attleboro High School.

According to police, a current student at the high school saw the alleged discussion between Sands and Ringuette on Facebook and contacted school officials, who immediately notified police.

The alleged discussion took place on the individual Facebook pages of the former students. A specific target was not mentioned in the discussions, and school officials do not believe that anyone at the school was in imminent danger.

Sands and Ringuette will be arraigned on Tuesday in Attleboro District Court.

Click for more on this story from MyFoxBoston.com 

Former Attleboro high students allegedly plot shooting on Facebook: MyFoxBOSTON.com



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Wall St. slides on economy worries, Greek debt

Specialist trader Joseph Dreyer of Knight Capital works at the post that trades Carnival Cruise lines on the floor of the New York Stock ExchangeNew numbers seem to show Europe's downturn is ready to turn into a full-fledged recession.




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Calif. woman killed by cannonball fired by husband

Western powers suspect Iran is seeking to build a nuclear bombEuropean Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton has written Iran's top nuclear negotiator proposing new talks on its nuclear program as soon as possible.




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LulzSec \'leader\' turns on fellow hacktivists: Feds

Five members of the suspected computer hacking groups affiliated with Anonymous were charged today -- including the suspected ring leader, who directed the entire operation from a Manhattan apartment complex -- after it was revealed one of the group's most high profile members has been working with federal authorities for months.

Hector Monsegur, a 28-year-old American believed to use the name "Sabu" on the internet, was arrested by federal agents last year and has been cooperating with law enforcement ever since, officials said. He pleaded guilty last August, a plea unsealed in federal court in Lower Manhattan today.

Based on information provided by Monsegur, at least four other members of the group were arrested recently -- one in Chicago and three overseas, officials said. Each were charged with conspiracy and at least two will appear in federal court in Lower Manhattan later today.

Federal officials said they expect the arrests to seriously damage LulzSec, an underground group also known as Lulz Security, which is also an offset of the hacking group Anonymous.

The group and Anonymous have taken credit for carrying out a number of high-profile hacking actions against companies and institutions including the CIA's website, Britain's Serious Organized Crime Agency, Japan's Sony Corp and Mexican government websites.

Last month, Anonymous published a recording of a confidential call between FBI agents and London detectives in which the law-enforcement agents discuss action they are taking against hacking.

READ: Anonymous Listens in on FBI-Scotland Yard Hacking Call

Anonymous also claimed to be behind the electronic theft of thousands of internal documents from the private intelligence analysis firm Stratfor. In charging documents released today, federal officials said that the charged co-conspirators had stolen credit card information from Stratfor employees and clients and made some $700,000 in unauthorized charges.

Earlier this week, a Twitter account connected to Sabu continued to rant against federal agents, supposedly while he was working with them.

"The federal government is run by a bunch of f*****g cowards. Don't give in to these people. Fight back. Stay strong," a tweet from Monday reads.

While Anonymous and LulzSec by nature have no official hierarchy, the user known as Sabu was one of the most vocal and prominent members in online communities. Fox News first reported Monsegur's alleged involvement with the today's arrests.

ABC News' Mark Crudele and Lee Ferran contributed to this report.

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Scenes from Super Tuesday: The final push

Sophia Walsh, 5, watches as her father William Walsh fills out his ballotOne woman worries about her Romney vote, Santorum strong in at least one Ohio town, and a final campaign push.




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NASCAR Bans General Lee

NASCAR Bans General Lee
NASCAR Bans General Lee



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NASCAR Bans General Lee

By Todd Starnes/TWITTER

Cooter is fighting mad.

Ben Jones, one of the stars of the hit television show “The Dukes of Hazzard,” is waging a war of words with NASCAR after they banned the General Lee from Phoenix International Raceway because the car's rooftop Confederate flag.

“It's political correctness run amuck and I'm outraged,” Jones told Fox News. “It's an insult to the heartland of America. (NASCAR) did this to please some board member who had some pressure put on him by some political group somewhere.”

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Jones, who played Cooter the mechanic in the popular series, is a former congressman from Georgia, who calls himself a progressive Southern Democrat. He owns “Cooters Place” and the “Dukes of Hazzard” museum. He also founded “Dukesfest,” an annual gathering of “Dukes of Hazzard” fans.

Jones accused NASCAR of “making knee-jerk corporate decisions based on political correctness.”

“I don't know what's going on here, but it's getting worse â€" this political correctness,” he said. “It's just gone nuts.”

The controversy started last month when NASCAR cancelled plans to have pro-golfer Bubba Watson drive the General Lee at Phoenix International Speedway.

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Watson bought the 1969 Dodge Charger for $110,000 at a car auction. He had intended to drive the car on a parade lap before the start of last weekend's spring Cup series race.

But NASCAR pulled the plug on the appearance after concerns were raised about the Confederate Flag painted on the car's rooftop.

“The image of the Confederate flag is not something that should play an official role in our sport as we continue to reach out to new fans and make NASCAR more inclusive,” NASCAR spokesman David Higdon said in a statement released to the Associated Press.

That explanation enraged Jones who said NASCAR “forgot where they came from.”

“So why would they exclude us â€" all the people who helped them get to where they are,” he demanded to know. “That sport is already in trouble. It's losing money and it's in part because they have gone big time. They've gotten above their raising as we say down South.”

NASCAR did not return telephone calls seeking comment, but their decision does have supporters â€" like AOL columnist David Whitley.

“NASCAR is just taking care of business,” Whitley wrote in a column that appeared on Sporting News. “Let's face it, alienating the majority of American consumers is no way to make money. The fact it's also the right thing to do is beside today's point.”

Watson told the Associated Press the only reason the flag is on the car is because that's the way it looked in the television show.

“Obviously, I don't stand for the Confederate flag,” he told the AP. “The Confederate flag was not used (in the show) for what people see it as today, so that's sad. But NASCAR was built on moonshining, so the show was built on moonshining. I thought it was fun. I didn't buy the car to get publicity; I bought it because I love it.”

And that's why Jones is so riled up. He said the flag has nothing to do with racism.

“I'm outraged and a lot of other people are,” he said. “We've got to put a stop to this kind of thinking. People know better. “I think saying that any display of this flag is an insult to all black folks is an insult to all black folks.”

A USA Today online poll showed that 85 percent opposed NASCAR banning the General Lee.

“We can't help it if a handful of pinheaded idiots disgrace and desecrate that flag by using it for racial purposes,” Jones said. “They dress up in bed sheets, too, but we still sleep on them â€" even though they give bed sheets a bad name.”

Jones said that he's “always fought for Civil Rights and equal rights and was involved in the Civil Rights Movement.”

“I try to judge people by the content of their character,” he said.

But the Confederate flag issue has sparked a fire in his belly.

“We're all fighting it,” he said. “That's what we do. We're truculent people. We like to fight. We're from the South and when you offend our family, we're going to stand up. We're going to say what we think.”

 Take that, Boss Hogg.



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Reality Star Suffers Aneurism

Reality TV star Tila Tequila was recovering Monday following a week in a hospital after suffering a brain aneurism, Radar Online reported.

The 30-year-old also overdosed on drugs in the wake of the potentially fatal aneurism.

Citing a source, the entertainment site reported that Tequila woke in the middle of the night suffering the effects of the aneurism. The pain caused her to act irrationally and she ingested two bottles of heavy prescription drugs.

"Tila threw up all over her bed after overdosing and felt like she was dying. She was screaming for help, and in desperation, broke her bedroom window and attempted to jump out," the source said.

"Finally a friend came over after getting a strange text from her and found her convulsing on the bed. He called an ambulance and she was taken to the hospital."

Tequila, who is known for her work as a model in men's magazines and her reality show "A Shot at Love with Tila Tequila," was kept in intensive care for a week.

"It's sad to think she may have some permanent brain damage," the source said.

"She still can't fully speak properly."

The source said Tequila, whose real name is Tila Nguyen, was released and will check into an outpatient program.



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Tribes, militia declare semiautonomous Libya region

BENGHAZI, Libya -- Tribal leaders and militia commanders declared a semiautonomous region in oil-rich eastern Libya on Tuesday, a move opponents fear will be the first step toward outright dividing the country six months after the fall of Muammar Qaddafi.

Libya's National Transitional Council, the interim central government based in the capital Tripoli, has repeatedly voiced its opposition to the creation of a partly autonomous eastern region, warning it could eventually lead to the breakup of the North African nation.

"This is very dangerous. This is a blatant call for fragmentation. We reject it in its entirety," said Fathi Baja, the head of political committee of the NTC. "We are against divisions and against any move that hurts the unity of the Libyan people."

The thousands of representatives of major tribal leaders, militia commanders and politicians who made the unilateral declaration at a conference in Benghazi said the move is not intended to divide the country and that they want their state to be part of a united Libya.

But they insisted the step was necessary to end the marginalization that the east suffered for decades under Qaddafi's rule. The former dictator focused development and largesse on the west, allowing infrastructure to decline in the east, an area that was a constant source of opposition to the regime. Many in the east accuse the National Transition Council of continuing to favor the west.

The conference said the eastern state, known as Barqa, would have its own parliament, police force, courts and capital -- Benghazi, the country's second largest city -- to run its own affairs.

Under their plan, foreign policy, the national army and oil resources would be left to a central, federal government in Tripoli. Barqa would run from central Libya to the Egyptian border in the east and down to the Chad and Sudan borders in the south.

The plan seeks to revive the pre-Qaddafi system in place from 1951 until 1963, when Libya, ruled by a monarchy, was divided into three states: Tripolitania in the west, Fezzan in the southwest and Cyrenaica in the east -- or Barqa, as it was called in Arabic.

Tuesday's announcement aimed to pose a federal system as a fait accompli before the National Transitional Council, which has already struggled in its attempts to set a path for post-Qaddafi Libya. The Council has called for national elections in June to select a 200-member assembly that will name a prime minister to form a new government and then write a constitution.

The declaration illustrates one of the fundamental weaknesses in Libya since the regime's fall -- the lack of political institutions. Over 42 years in power, Qaddafi stripped the country of any credible representative bodies to concentrate power in his own hands. As a result, since his fall in August and death in October, towns, cities, tribes and militias across Libya have largely taken authority into their own hands, acting on their own. Some establish a level of legitimacy, while others don't.

So far other regions have not made any moves to create their own states or call for a federal system.

The Benghazi conference rejected a draft law put forward by the NTC to organize the election, because it would give the east only 60 seats in the assembly. Drafters say that reflects the west's larger population in the country of 6 million, but easterners see it as a continuation of discrimination against their region. The conference called for rejection of the election law.

The gathering appointed Ahmed al-Zubair, Libya's longest serving political prisoner under Qaddafi, as leader of its governing council. Al-Zubair, a descendant of the former Libyan King Idris whom Qaddafi ousted in 1969 coup, is also a member of the National Transitional Council.
The conference said elections would be held in the east in two weeks to chose a governing council.

Al-Zubair pledged to protect the rights of the region but also said Barqa state would recognize NTC as the legitimate representative for Libya in the international arena.

"Residents of Barqa, we are brothers. We protect each other," he told the gathering. "Libya will not be divided. Its one nation."

"I will be the leader who will protect justice and equality," he said. "I will protect your rights."
Baja, of the NTC, said that unilaterally creating a Barqa council "is a call for separation."

"What does it mean to have a Barqa army or to return to the old constitution? What does it mean even after you say (it is) under the umbrella of the NTC?" he said. He also blamed the government's poor performance for stagnation and for failure to address the needs of the people.

Among those who attended the conference were top leaders of heavyweight tribes of the eastern region, including the Ubaidat, Mughariba and Awajeer, which hold a powerful sway over large sectors of the population in the east. Also attending were commanders from the Barqa Army, a grouping of 61 eastern "revolutionary militias." Several senior Defense Ministry officials of the government also attended and supported the declaration.

Fadl-Allah Haroun, a senior tribal figure and commander of a revolutionary militia, said the declaration is meant to have administrative independence not separation.

"Federalism is not division but unity. We are not talking about changing the flag or national anthem. We are talking about different administration, a parliament and managing the financial affairs," he said.

Abu-Bakr Faraj, who is a deputy defense minister in the transitional Cabinet created by the NTC, attended the ceremony and told AP that the move is meant to "correct the path of the revolution."

Barqa's newborn council will "cut off the road in front of the hijackers of the revolution from controlling our destiny," he said.



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