Daisy Bram a Witness in Federal Case Against Three San Francisco Cops

On March 1, Daisy Bram was released from a Butte County, Calif.,
jail after being convicted of cultivation of marijuana and
possession of marijuana with intent to sell (Bram was sentenced to
120 days but released early due to crowding). Her three children
were taken by Child Protective Services more than a year ago and
remain in foster care. Reason TV told Bram’s story last year in a
program called “Parents, Pot, and Prohibition: Daisy Bram’s
Story.”

It turns out there’s a lot more to Bram’s story. Earlier this
week, the San Francisco Chronicle reported that Bram is a
key witness in a federal case against three San Francisco police
officers. In 2010, Bram and her partner, Jayme Walsh, were acting
as informants for San Francisco police. Bram says that officers
asked Bram and Walsh to sell several pounds of seized marijuana for
a 25 percent cut of the profits. Bram reported the incident, but
the officers were cleared of any wrongdoing at the time.

Is Bram’s role in the federal probe of San Francisco police
officers connected in any way to her legal troubles in Butte
County? “I just think it’s really suspect that all this is going
down the way it has,” Bram told the San Francisco
Chronicle.

Butte County Deputy District Attorney Jeff Greeson denies any
connection. “That stuff in San Francisco has absolutely no bearing
on the charges in Butte County,” he said.

The full San Francisco Chronicle article is
here
.

Here’s Reason TV’s program on Bram.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1chJ01w
via IFTTT

Unemployment Up to 6.7 Percent, Russia Attacks Ukrainian Base, Florida Woman Suing Over Mug Shot: P.M. Links

  • florida womanOfficial unemployment rose
    to 6.7 percent in February.
  • Russian forces have
    reportedly
    attacked a Ukrainian military base a few miles from
    the port city of Sevastopol.
  • Rand Paul spoke at
    CPAC
    , telling attendees to vote for candidates that are friends
    of liberty, not just who are Republican. He got some of the loudest
    applause at the conference so far after telling the NSA to mind
    their own business.  Rick Santorum spoke earlier, slamming
    politicians like Mitt Romney and John McCain for “apologizing” for
    conservatism.
  • While introducing Aretha Franklin at a “Women of Soul” event at
    the White House, President Obama told attendees she sang about what
    R-S-P-E-C-T
    meant to her.
  • Newsweek may be
    backing off
    its claim that Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto is the
    creator of Bitcoin, while Bitcoin users are
    currently raising
    bitcoins for Nakamoto. They’ve collected

    more than 22
     for him so far.
  • A Florida woman arrested on an alleged DUI in 2010 whose mug
    shot went viral is
    now suing
    a records search website, accusing it of using her
    mug shot for commercial purposes.
  • Fox’s reboot of Carl Sagan’s PBS series “Cosmos,” narrated by
    Neil deGrasse Tyson, will
    premiere
    Sunday night on most Fox affiliate stations.

Follow Reason and Reason 24/7 on
Twitter, and like us on Facebook. You
can also get the top stories mailed to you–sign up
here

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1fQE9iJ
via IFTTT

David Harsanyi on Why Democrats Are Losing Voter Trust

According to many experts, Republicans are
expected to hold the House and could even take the U.S. Senate.
This seems to be a perplexing turn of events for many in the media,
notes David Harsanyi. Democrats do hold a lead on “trust” over
Republicans on a few issues. But more significantly, a growing
number of extraordinarily sensible voters say they don’t trust
either party to handle their health care choices or the
economy. 

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1fQE9iF
via IFTTT

Judge: FAA Can’t Fine Drone Pilot for “Reckless” Flying

Even as Amazon announces its intentions to
launch delivery drones
, beer companies try to
send brews aloft
, and aerial photographers plunk down credit
cards to buy their very own quadcopter from Chris Anderson,
the bottom of every article about the brave new drone-tastic world
just over the horizon had a sentence like this:

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has said that it will
issue regulations for the use of commercial drones in
2015. 

Last month, the FAA announced that it might consider some early
approvals on a case-by-case basis and there were other signs the
agency’s
control of drones was slipping
. But a new administrative court
ruling
casts doubt
on whether such rule and permissions from the body
that regulates all things airborne would even be binding:

Raphael Pirker, who had been docked $10,000 by the Federal
Aviation Administration for using a drone to shoot a promotional
video, won an appeal yesterday of the fine for reckless flying. The
judge in the dispute dismissed the first-ever such fine, saying the
FAA has no authority over small unmanned aircraft….

Patrick Geraghty, the administrative law judge for the National
Transportation Safety Board who decided on the appeal, said that at
the time of Pirker’s flight to shoot a promotional video over the
University of Virginia in Charlottesville on Oct. 17, 2011, “there
was no enforceable FAA rule” on the type of model aircraft he
used.

If he accepted the FAA’s argument, it would mean that “a flight
in the air of a paper aircraft, or a toy balsa wood glider, could
subject the operator to” FAA’s penalties, Geraghty wrote in his
decision.

The FAA can (and likely will) appeal the ruling, but this leaves
big commercial players and mom-and-pop drone shops alike in an even
greater state of legal limbo in the meantime.  

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1fQE9iC
via IFTTT

5 Things To Ponder: Serious Stuff

Submitted by Lance Roberts of STA Wealth Management,

There was so many good things to read this past week that it was hard to narrow it down to a topic group.  After a brief respite early this year, the markets are hitting new highs confirming the current bullish trend.  As a money manager, this requires me to increase equity exposure back to full target weightings.  After such an extended run in the markets, this seems somewhat counter-intuitive.  It is, but as Bill Clinton once famously stated; "What is….is." 

However, while the current market "IS" within a bullish trend currently, it doesn't mean that this will always be the case.  This is why, as investors, we must modify Clinton's line to: "What is…is…until it isn't."  That thought is the foundation of this weekend's "Things To Ponder."  In order to recognize when market dynamics have changed for the worse, we must be aware of the risks that are currently mounting.

1) Fisher Warns Fed's Bond Buying Could Be Distorting Markets via Reuters

While this article falls in the "no s***" category, Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher points out areas that we should be paying closer attention to for signs of change.

"There are increasing signs quantitative easing has overstayed its welcome: Market distortions and acting on bad incentives are becoming more pervasive," he said of the asset purchases, which are sometimes called QE.

 

"I fear that we are feeding imbalances similar to those that played a role in the run-up to the financial crisis."

Here are his main points:

1) QE was wasted over the last 5 years with the Government failing to use "easy money" to restructure debt, reform entitlements and regulations.

2) QE has driven investors to take risks that could destabilize financial markets.

3) Soaring margin debt is a problem.

4) Narrow spreads between corporate and Treasury debt are a concern.

5) Price-To-Projected Earnings, Price-To-Sales and Market Cap-To-GDP are all at "eye popping levels not seen since the dot-com boom."

"We must monitor these indicators very carefully so as to ensure that the ghost of 'irrational exuberance' does not haunt us again,"


In order to make it in professional sports, you have to be an elite athlete.  What is amazing, is that among all of the elite athletes, there are always one or two that rise above all others.  Players like Michael Jordon, Tiger Woods, Nolan Ryan and many others have elevated their game to inexplicable levels.  In the investment game, there are a few individuals that have done the same.  The follow three pieces are views from some of these men Howard Marks, Jeff Gundlach and Seth Klarman.

2) Howard Marks: In The End The Devil Usually Wins via Finanz Und Wirtschaft

"Our mantra at Oaktree Capital for the last few years has been: «move forward, but with caution». Although a lot has changed since then I think it’s still appropriate to keep the same mantra. Today, things are not cheap anymore.  Rather I would describe the price of most assets as being on the high side of fair. We’re not in the low of the crisis like five years ago."

 

"Let’s think about a pendulum: It swings from too rich to too cheap, but it never swings halfway and stops. And it never swings halfway and goes back to where it came from. As stocks do better, more people jump on board.  And every year that stocks do well wins a few more converts until eventually the last person jumps on board. And that’s the top of the upswing."

 

"But there actually are two risks in investing: One is to lose money and the other is to miss opportunity. You can eliminate either one, but you can’t eliminate both at the same time."

 

"There are two main things to watch: valuation and behavior."

3) Seth Klarman: Downplaying Risk Never Turns Out Well via Value Walk

"“In the face of mixed economic data and at a critical inflection point in Federal Reserve policy, the stock market, heading into 2014, resembles a Rorschach test,” he wrote. “What investors see in the inkblots says considerably more about them than it does about the market.”

 

"If you’re more focused on downside than upside, if you’re more interested in return of capital than return on capital, if you have any sense of market history, then there’s more than enough to be concerned about.”

 

“We can draw no legitimate conclusions about the Fed’s ability to end QE without severe consequences.”

 

“Fiscal stimulus, in the form of sizable deficits, has propped up the consumer, thereby inflating corporate revenues and earnings. But what is the right multiple to pay on juiced corporate earnings?”

 

“There is a growing gap between the financial markets and the real economy,”

 

“Our assessment is that the Fed’s continuing stimulus and suppression of volatility has triggered a resurgence of speculative froth.”

 

“In an ominous sign, a recent survey of U.S. investment newsletters by Investors Intelligence found the lowest proportion of bears since the ill-fated year of 1987,” he wrote. “A paucity of bears is one of the most reliable reverse indicators of market psychology. In the financial world, things are hunky dory; in the real world, not so much. Is the feel-good upward march of people’s 401(k)s, mutual fund balances, CNBC hype, and hedge fund bonuses eroding the objectivity of their assessments of the real world? We can say with some conviction that it almost always does. Frankly, wouldn’t it be easier if the Fed would just announce the proper level for the S&P, and spare us all the policy announcements and market gyrations?”

4) Jeff Gundlach & Howard Marks: Beware Of Junk Bonds via Pragmatic Capitalist

 "There’s been some cautionary commentary in recent months from some bond market heavyweights.  Most notably, Howards Marks and Jeff Gundlach. In a Bloomberg interview today, Marks said you need to be cautious about low quality issuers:

 

'When things are rollicking and the market is permitting low-quality issuers to issue debt, that’s when you need a lot of caution,'

 

And just a few weeks before that Jeff Gundlach referred to junk bonds as the most overvalued they’ve ever been relative to Treasury Bonds."

5) Bernanke Unleashed: What He Can Say Now That He Couldn't Say Before via Zero Hedge

Now that Ben Bernanke is no longer the head of the Fed, he can finally tell the truth about what caused the financial crash. At least that's what a packed auditorium of over 1000 people as part of the financial conference staged by National Bank of Abu Dhabi, the UAE's largest bank, was hoping for earlier today when they paid an exorbitant amount of money to hear the former chairman talk.

"The United States became 'overconfident', he said of the period before the September 2008 collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers. That triggered a crash from which parts of the world, including the U.S. economy, have not fully recovered.

 

'This is going to sound very obvious but the first thing we learned is that the U.S. is not invulnerable to financial crises,' Bernanke said.

 

"He also said he found it hard to find the right way to communicate with investors when every word was closely scrutinised. 'That was actually very hard for me to get adjusted to that situation where your words have such effect. I came from the academic background and I was used to making hypothetical examples and … I learned I can't do that because the markets do not understand hypotheticals.'

 

The complexity though arises because in order to help the average person, you have to do things — very distasteful things — like try to prevent some large financial companies from collapsing.  The result was there are still many people after the crisis who still feel that it was unfair that some companies got helped and small banks and small business and average families didn’t get direct help.  It’s a hard perception to break.”

I guess the real question is now that the markets are once again over confident, over extended and excessively bullish – have we actually learned anything?

Have a great weekend.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/O3g2XW Tyler Durden

Treasuries Tumble Most In 6 Months As Trannies Soar To New Highs

The world and their pet rabbit was convinced yesterday that today's jobs number was both the most-important-number-in-the-world and didn't matter (because whether it beat or missed it was bullish for stocks). Seconds after the release that appeared to be true as JPY instantly dragged stocks to record highs (and the USD up and bonds and gold down). However, trumped by confirmation that the taper is continuing, Gazprom warnings, Lavrov threats, and finally reports of a Russian invasion, stocks leaked lower to Tuesday's ramp-day closing levels. Thanks to some last-minute JPY and VIX banging, S&P closed green for the 15th of last 16 NFPs. Despite intraday volatility, the USD ended the week unchanged, gold +1%, silver -1.5% and Treasuries +14bps or so (its worst week in 6 months!). Credit markets continue to be non-believers (with the high-yield bond ETF plunging this week). Critically, after last night's default in China, Iron Ore and Copper futures were crushed and we suspect Sunday night's Asia open could see more fireworks.

So some see today's jobs data as good news (NFP beat) which is bad news as it encourages moar taper… sell bonds, sell gold, buy USD and it took a little for stocks to catch up that in fact this is dismal job growth and hoping that we have reached escape velocity is a dream… and this print won't allow the Fed to save the day if we tumble on the back of some exogenous event…

 

Only one thing mattered today to keep the "common knowledge" meme alive – a green close on a payrolls Friday no matter waht was critical… JPY was tired having been abused all week… so VIX, the old-whipping-boy of market-manipulating muppets, was smashed lower into the close just perfectly to get the S&P 500 cash index to close green by the smallest margin…

 

Now tell us this – some talking head claimed that everyone is hedged? and that's the ammo for a rmap higher… if everyone is hedged then who the fuck was selling the crap out of vol into the close today?

 

For 2014, Gold and Silver remain the winners, The USD and HY Credit the losers…

 

High-beta has had a tough couple of days…the S&P has closed higher on a jobs Friday 15 of the last 16 times… as we were saved in th elast few minutes…

 

And the MoMo names suffered the last 2 days…

 

But Trannies just were on fire on the week…

 

Healthcare (well Biotechs) continues to lead the year but Financials were th ebig winners this week (up over 3%)…

 

Treasuries were banged higher in yield all week…

 

and even as stocks fell on Friday to end the worst week in 6 months…

 

Credit markets are not as exuberant as stocks…

 

While the USDollar ended the week unchanged (ramping back on the NFP print) – it is clear from the chart below what currenies were in charge this week (AUD up, JPY down)…

 

And so AUDJPY ran the show in stocks…

 

Commodities were a mixed bag despite the UNCH of the dollar… copper crushed on China and gold bid as fear remains about Ukraine…

 

Interestingly, "Most shorted" stocks ended the week -0.6% as the massive squeze at the start of the week gave way as "most shorted" stocks sold off dramatically more than the broad market…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: Iron Ore and Copper collapsing as credit fears unwind in China…

 

Bonus Bonus Chart: Seems like the NFIB "promises" to raise compensation were worthless…


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/O3fhhz Tyler Durden

Has This Chart “Reached A Permanently High Plateau”?

Despite stocks being at record highs, sell-side strategists proclaiming today’s jobs report as great, and the Fed comfortable tapering in the face of transitory weather-related macro weakness, the following chart suggests all is not well… Echoing Irving Fisher, it appears we have reached a permanently high plateau in the duration of unemployment in America…

 

 

h/t @Not_Jim_Cramer


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1k0X0g2 Tyler Durden

HHS Remains Vague About Obamacare Budget Details

Prior to the release of President Obama’s budget
this week, there was some speculation that it might shed light on
the administration’s opaque spending in support of Obamacare.

But the budget proposal for the Department of Health and Human
Services, which oversees the law, still leaves a number of
questions unanswered.

Via Politico:

Forced to reveal more details under a provision tucked in this
year’s bipartisan budget deal, HHS declared Friday how it used
Secretary Kathleen Sebelius’ authority to move about $1.6 billion
in departmental funds around last year — the cabinet secretary’s
version of looking for change under the couch cushions and hitting
the jackpot.

But HHS didn’t say exactly how it spent the money, and it didn’t
lay out the kind of detail Republicans sought.

In particular, the budget documents omitted details about the
specific contracts for work on the federal exchange that misfired
on launch last October. How much was spent, who got the money, and
how much work is left to be done remain among the
Obamacare questions that the White House won’t
answer

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1hTP0Ng
via IFTTT

Fed’s Dudley “US Dollar Wins”; Bitcoin “Not a Good Store Of Value”

While the volatility of Bitcoin has been considerable, perhaps merely reflective of the early days of a revolution, the fact that the “value experts” at the Fed have pronounced:

  • *DUDLEY SAYS BITCOIN ‘IS NOT VERY GOOD STORE OF VALUE’
  • *DUDLEY SAYS ‘U.S. DOLLAR WINS’ OVER BITCOIN ACROSS MANY METRICS

..raised an eyebrow or two on our furrowed brows. We thought a look at the following two charts since the inception of Bitcoin and the inception of the Fed would help clarify “value” stability…

 

Bitcoin since inception…

 

And the USDollar since the Fed’s inception…

 

You decide?


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/O37vUP Tyler Durden

How the Repo Industry is Collecting Data on Virtually Every Car in America

Privacy is being violated from all angles. The government, private corporations, the list is seemingly endless. While there have been many reports of government agencies using license plate scanners under questionable legality, the role of private corporations and the repo industry has received considerably less coverage. Until now.

Beta Boston (part of the Boston Globe) has published an excellent report into this very disturbing trend. Excepts below:

Few notice the “spotter car” from Manny Sousa’s repo company as it scours Massachusetts parking lots, looking for vehicles whose owners have defaulted on their loans. Sousa’s unmarked car is part of a technological revolution that goes well beyond the repossession business, transforming any ­industry that wants to check on the whereabouts of ordinary people.

An automated reader attached to the spotter car takes a picture of every license plate it passes and sends it to a company in Texas that already has more than 1.8 billion plate scans from vehicles across the country.

These scans mean big money for Sousa — typically $200 to $400 every time the spotter finds a vehicle that’s stolen or in default — so he runs his spotter around the clock, typically adding 8,000 plate scans to the database in Texas each day.

“Honestly, we’ve found random apartment complexes and shopping ­plazas that are sweet spots” where the company can impound multiple vehicles, explains Sousa, the president of New England Associates Inc. in Bridgewater. 

But the most significant impact of Sousa’s business is far bigger than locating cars whose owners have defaulted on loans: It is the growing database of snapshots showing where Americans were at specific times, information that everyone from private detectives to ­insurers are willing to pay for.

While public debate about the license reading technology has centered on how police should use it, business has eagerly adopted the $10,000 to $17,000 scanners with remarkably few limits.

At least 10 repossession companies in Massachusetts say they mount the scanners on spotter cars or tow trucks, and Digital Recognition Network of Fort Worth, Texas, claims to collect plate scans of 40 percent of all US vehicles annually.

continue reading

from A Lightning War for Liberty http://ift.tt/NGY11C
via IFTTT