U.S. Public’s Contracting International Concerns
Sep 29th, 2008 • Posted in: Statline
For more information, see this week’s Research Report.

For more information, see this week’s Research Report.
by Ethics Newsline™ editor Carl Hausman
There’s a compelling ethical text and subtext to the current economic implosion.
At the most basic level, there are several salient moral controversies, including the oft-repeated warning of “moral hazard” — bailing out reckless investors and therefore encouraging more recklessness. There’s also an obvious do-the-ends-justify-the-means dilemma, illustrated by critics who normally deplore government intervention in the economy but concede that the current meltdown is so ominous that a federal bailout is justified.
Fairness issues abound, too. Is it equitable to bail out investment banks but not individual homeowners who face foreclosure? Or what about a scenario that reverses the picture? And clearly, there is a long-term-versus-short-term debate wrapped in this quandary. Does a bailout constitute a quick fix that will culminate in a bigger disaster down the road?
Vital points, all, but I wonder if we’re missing a broader ethical subtext in all of this. As the late social critic Neil Postman pointed out, our language sometimes gets in the way of our thinking. We think by using words and then deceive ourselves into thinking that our vocabulary is neutral and unedited, when in fact the way we subtly define words sets our mental table for us.
And that’s why I’m fascinated by arguments that invoke the “free market.”
First, a disclaimer: I am no expert in economics or high finance, as my accountant will attest. But I do know something about government regulation in the news industry, an area I beat to death in a couple of books I wrote a decade ago, and I remember the same “free market” assumption being invoked and, oddly, never challenged.
Basically, it goes like this: Back in the early days of broadcasting, the government confected a system in a massive congressional act whereby licenses were granted to companies to operate a broadcast station over public airwaves. Those licenses were sarcastically (but more or less accurately) characterized as licenses to print money.
However, about a half-century later, when the same government insisted that television stations devote a certain amount of time to news and public service programming, station owners would complain about the affront to the free market.
During that time of sweeping deregulation in the industry, I did not fundamentally disagree with some of the owners’ views, but neither did I buy their free-market rationalization. It rings hollow. Broadcast licenses don’t exist in nature. They were created by regulation, their resultant profits were enforced by regulation, and virtual monopoly protection over a particular broadcast frequency was granted by legislation that profoundly restricted “freedom” of other people to operate on the same channel.
We’re frequently making the same sloppy assumption when we argue about the nature of free markets in the current financial crisis. Corporations don’t exist in nature, either. They were created by regulation and endowed with artificial superpowers: They are potentially immortal, they have wide latitude in procuring tax advantages, and most important they allow investment by the public without risk beyond losing the original investment.
In other words, because of provisions of corporate regulation and structure I can invest $100 in the stock of a corporation — say, in a company that makes wheels — and have only my $100 at risk. If I, as a sole proprietor, open a store to sell wheels and the wheels prove defective, I face a lifetime of liability and possible debt. But as a stockholder, my risk is limited to my $100.
This is a pretty good idea. But regulatory shielding of investor from risk was ramped up to extremes in the last few years, and that artificial invention of regulation has propelled us into our current mess.
It started when investors looked for new ways to capitalize on the soaring housing market. An inventive investment vehicle was devised that took risky mortgages, sliced and diced them into various portfolio offerings, and moved them through so many layers that it was doubtful any individual mortgage could be traced back to its originator.
This brought about a profound change in lending practices: No longer did local bank presidents have to keep a nervous eye on their mortgage holders. (As did the president of the bank that held my first mortgage; he knew every mortgage holder and could, if prompted, recite the names alphabetically.) Instead, under the new system of repackaging mortgage debt, the risk was passed along to other investors seeking a quick profit.
There’s nothing inherently wrong with profit. But there is something wrong about writing mortgages that obviously could not be repaid because the repackaging of the investment would make it somebody else’s problem — a problem residing on some distant level of the house of cards. And there’s something profoundly wrong about turning a blind eye to all this on the assumption that reckless and rapacious pursuit of profit is somehow justified by the “free market.”
Investment bankers chose to be free when they wanted to be, but relied on shaky financial vehicles created and allowed by regulation when it suited their purpose (in other words, when the profits were flowing).
Regulators, including the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, chose a freedom of convenience when they employed an oxymoronic strategy termed, apparently without irony, “voluntary supervision.” (By the way, they’ve admitted it didn’t work.)
I don’t have a solution to the economic crisis, and I’m beginning to suspect the same overseers who let it fester don’t, either. But I do think we have learned one lesson from all of this: We’d better stop employing the conceit that “free” is good when it means “free for me.”
©2008 Institute for Global Ethics
Questions or comments? Write to newsline@globalethics.org.
“The last six months have made it abundantly clear that voluntary regulation does not work.”
– U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission chairman Christopher Cox, speaking last week in a statement following the release of a report by the agency’s inspector general that strongly criticizes the SEC’s “performance in monitoring Bear Stearns before it collapsed in March,” according to the New York Times
Source: New York Times, Sep. 26.
At issue: Acceptable level of freedom in free markets, clamping down on executive compensation, and whether it’s ethical to profit from short selling
NEW YORK and LONDON
Ethics angles on the U.S. economic crisis were at the top of the news last week as the U.S. Congress repeatedly failed to pass the proposed $700 billion bailout of Wall Street. Among the stories:
Sources: New York Times, Sep. 26 — BBC, Sep. 26 — Reuters, Sep. 26.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Sep. 22 — Related Newsline story, Sep. 8 — Related Newsline story, Aug. 25 — Related Newsline story, Aug. 11 — Related Newsline story, July 7.
Britain falls down the Transparency International list; New Zealand, Denmark, and Sweden rated least corrupt; Somalia, Myanmar, Iraq and Haiti at bottom
BERLIN
An annual index of global corruption published by watchdog group Transparency International (TI) shows many of the same nations as last year near the top and bottom of the list, but features a noticeable slippage among some European nations.
Britain, for example, is seen as more corrupt than at any time in the last 13 years, slipping from 12th to 16th place. London’s Daily Telegraph reports that at least part of the slippage in perceived corruption was an ongoing investigation into allegations that defense contractor BAE was involved in a series of bribery incidents.
Also cited, according to the Telegraph, were concerns stemming from the recent “cash for peerages” scandal in which it was alleged that seats in the House of Lords were granted in exchange for political contributions.
The report ranks a total of 180 countries, measuring perceptions of how easy or difficult it is to do business or deliver aid in terms of dealing with corruption.
While Germany moved up two spots to 14th place in the ranking, with TI praising the government for rooting out the massive Siemens scandal, the report did urge the government to take a larger role in fighting political corruption, according to a summary from Berlin-based Deutsche Welle.
Somalia was at the bottom of the list, followed by Myanmar, Iraq, and Haiti — a similar lineup to that in recent years.
However some African nations, such as Nigeria, which rose to 177th place, showed significant improvement. But Osita Nnamani Ogbu, Nigeria’s secretary general of Transparency, said corruption remains “intolerably high,” putting some of the blame on weak anticorruption agencies, according to the Lagos Daily Sun.
India scored near the middle of the pack, falling several rankings this year to 85th place, a drop attributed in part to a recent cash-for-votes scandal, according to the Times of India.
New Zealand, Denmark, and Sweden finished at the top of the list in a three-way tie. Canada finished 8th, and the United States finished 18th.
This year’s survey recommends that foreign aid be more carefully monitored to ensure that it flows to the intended recipients, according to a report from the Voice of America.
Sources: Times of India, Sep. 24 — International Herald Tribune, Sep. 23 — Telegraph, Sep. 23 — Deutsche Welle, Sep. 23 — Voice of America, Sep. 23 — Daily Sun, Sep. 23.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Sep. 8 — Related Newsline story, Aug. 4 — Related Newsline story, July 21 — Related Newsline story, June 30 — Related Newsline story, June 16 — Transparency International report, Sep. 23.
He claims evidence was withheld from defense attorneys
WASHINGTON
A U.S. military prosecutor pursuing a case against a Guantánamo detainee quit last week, citing ethics concerns.
Army Lt. Col. Darrel Vanderveld said he was concerned about the government’s case against an Afghan detainee and about his office’s alleged failure to turn over materials to defense attorneys, UPI reports.
According to the McClatchy news syndicate, Vanderveld is the fourth prosecutor known to have resigned from the administration’s controversial program of trying detainees before military commissions.
Vanderveld, an Army reservist, filed a four-page declaration in which he claimed that “potentially exculpatory” evidence had not been provided to defense attorneys for Mohammed Jawad, a 23-year-old man accused of throwing a grenade into a jeep transporting troops, inuring two soldiers and an interpreter, reports the Los Angeles Times.
Vanderveld has declined requests for interviews and his declaration was not made public.
A Pentagon spokesman declined specific comment on the case but told the Agence France-Presse that “hundreds of thousands of pages” of documents had been turned over to defense attorneys in the 22 military commission cases currently under way.
Sources: UPI, Sep. 26 — McClatchy Washington Bureau, Sep. 26 — Los Angeles Times, Sep. 26 — AFP, Sep. 26.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, June 23 — Related Newsline story, June 16 — Related Newsline story, May 12 — Related Newsline story, Nov. 5, 2007 — Related Newsline story, Aug. 6, 2007.
Scientists report breakthrough in “ethical” stem-cell technology; Australia may grant patent to disgraced South Korean researcher; federal authorities probe drug test
VARIOUS DATELINES
Developments in bioethics were featured in several world-press reports last week. Among them:
Sources: Washington Post, Sept 26 — Wall Street Journal, Sep. 26 — Sky News, Sep. 26 — U.K. Press Association, Sep. 25 — Chosun Ilbo, Sep. 25.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Aug. 11 — Related Newsline story, July 28 — Related Newsline story, June 2 — Related Newsline story, May 27 — Related Newsline story, Aug. 25.
Analysts say latest adulteration incident symptomatic of more than just weak regulation; one observer says social norms must be altered
NEW YORK and BEIJING
China’s premier, reacting to a growing crisis over contaminated milk, last week vowed to “draw a lesson” from the incident and promote better business ethics.
The state-run China Daily newspaper quoted Chinese premier Wen Jiabao: “Only by combining such tangible things as technologies, products, and management with ideals, ethics, and responsibility can we build the DNA of our economy.”
Jiabao’s remarks, made at a United Nations function, came as the fallout from the tainted milk scandal spread, with tainted crackers uncovered in South Korea, two more illnesses reported in Hong Kong, a British grocery chain pulling Chinese products from store shelves, and widespread purging of Chinese products from stores in Japan, according to reports from CNN and MarketWatch.
The current scandal is traced back to adulteration of milk products with melamine, which is typically used in plastic and fertilizer production. It is believed that the melamine, which causes a chemical reaction that boosts the apparent protein level in liquid, was added to watered-down milk to fool quality checks. Roughly 54,000 babies reportedly have been sickened by contaminated milk powder.
An analysis from the Christian Science Monitor cites a variety of experts who say the scandal reveals more than just a regulatory problem.
“China has the problems of any transitional economy,” Yanzhong Huang, a global health expert at New Jersey’s Seton Hall University, told the Monitor. “But the deeper and more fundamental challenge China faces is a systematic lack of business ethics.”
“You cannot fully police the whole food chain,” added Dali Yang, a politics professor at the University of Chicago. “A lot depends on changes in social norms. People have to recognize that integrity does matter.”
Sources: CNN, Sep. 25 — China Daily, Sep. 25 — MarketWatch, Sep. 19 — Christian Science Monitor, Sep. 17.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Sep. 22 — Related Newsline story, Sep. 15 — Related Newsline story, Sep. 8 — Related Newsline story, Aug. 11 — Related Newsline story, Aug. 11.
House Ethics Committee begins probe of Ways and Means chairman; New Jersey gets tough on ethics; Irish politicians debate privacy laws, but study shows most of the complaints about intrusion come from politicians; economic collapse seems to force presidential campaigns off the low road, posits one editorial page
VARIOUS DATELINES
Last week marked a brisk season in stories from the busy intersection of politics and ethics. Among the items:
Sources: San Francisco Chronicle, Sep. 28 — Star-Ledger, Sep. 27 — Asbury Park Press, Sep. 26 — Irish Independent, Sep. 26 — USA Today, Sep. 24.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Sep. 22 — Related Newsline story, Sep. 15 — Related Newsline story, Sep. 15 — Related Newsline story, July 28 — Related Newsline story, Sep. 10, 2007.
As tough times overtake U.S. economy, public appears to be turning inward to domestic concerns
From the Pew Research Center:
“The public is feeling much better about how the war in Iraq is going these days, but at the same time has a sharply diminished appetite for U.S. efforts to deal with an array of global problems. Fewer people than at any point in this decade assign high priority to such foreign policy goals as preventing genocide, strengthening the United Nations, promoting and defending human rights, and reducing the global spread of AIDS and other infectious diseases.
“There also is decreased support for an assertive national security policy. Fully 45% say that reducing U.S. overseas military commitments should be a top policy priority, up 10 points since 2004. Notably, even the goal of halting the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction — a widely shared objective for nearly two decades — is now viewed as less important.
“A new nationwide survey on foreign policy attitudes by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, conducted in collaboration with the Council on Foreign Relations, finds a striking rise in public optimism about the situation in Iraq. Nearly six-in-ten Americans (58%) say the U.S. military effort there is going well, the highest percentage in more than four years. Yet improving perceptions about the situation in Iraq have done little to increase support for maintaining U.S. troops there.
“Half of the public views the war as the wrong decision, while the same percentage favors withdrawing U.S. forces from Iraq as soon as possible…. By contrast, there is strong public support for maintaining U.S. forces in Afghanistan — a notable exception to the broader trend against global engagement.
“The public’s top long-term foreign policy goals are decidedly America-centric. Defending the country against terrorism, protecting U.S. jobs, and weaning the country from imported energy all draw extensive bipartisan support….
“The survey … finds that 76% rate reducing U.S. dependence on foreign energy sources as a top foreign policy priority, up 13 points from July 2004. The public’s willingness to consider policies to achieve that objective appears to be practically open-ended….
“More Americans say that Iran represents the greatest danger to the United States than mention any other country. About one-in-five (21%) volunteers Iran as the greatest danger, in an open-ended format; 16% mention China, while 14% cite Russia. The proportion naming Russia has jumped substantially since February 2007 (from 2% to 14%)….”
For the full release from Pew, Sep. 24, click here.
“The quest for riches darkens the sense of right and wrong.”
– Antiphanes (Greece-based poet, circa 408-334 BCE)

For more information, see this week’s Research Report.
by Rushworth M. Kidder
How will the next president respond to a crisis?
For voters who care about moral responsibility in a complex world, there are few more important questions. But the answers, during an ordinary campaign season, usually are only speculative responses to hypothetical what ifs. Candidates usually don’t have to respond to real crises.
Last week that changed. With the challenge to financial markets and the ensuing interventions by the federal government, voters got to watch how the presidential and vice presidential candidates responded to a critical turn of events unfolding in real time. In other words, we got to see whether the candidates looked and acted presidential.
The results were disappointing. It’s now widely felt that none of them rose to the occasion — at least not until late in the week after the moment had passed. Given the chance to assert a commanding national presence, they punted. Why? Was the crisis too big, such that they didn’t want to risk interfering with the actual crisis managers? Did they feel it was inappropriate for a campaign to engage in real-time decision making? Were their staffs buffaloed because they lacked the knowledge that sitting presidents have and therefore were unable to formulate a presidential-sounding position? Or — sober thought — is none of the four capable of looking and acting presidential in a crisis?
I’d answer no on all counts. Their failure isn’t personal to them. It reveals a basic flaw in our campaign system, which is that the qualities needed to get elected in the United States are fundamentally different from the qualities needed to govern the United States once in office.
We’re talking qualities, not experience. We’ve known for years that the experiences are substantially different: No one believes that a suitable inhabitant of the Oval Office is required to know how to eat vulcanized chicken in shirtsleeves under a campaign tent. What’s now becoming clear is that the qualities — the attributes, characteristics, and habits of mind — also are entirely different:
Okay, so I’ve overstated it. Campaigns do have visions and values, and presidents don’t always act as they should. But you get the point: The system itself is driving us toward these extremes. What’s more, campaigning may hold more overt ethical risk than governing. Voters sadly have come to expect from campaigns a level of moral sponginess — disrespectful language, irresponsible promises, untruthful spins — that they’re more apt to find offensive in presidents.
And that’s the ultimate paradox. At the Olympics, athletes are asked to do precisely what they’ve trained for years to do. In U.S. politics, the winners are asked to do something at right angles to their training — laying aside much of what they’ve learned about campaigning and mastering a whole new set of skills for governing. Little wonder, then, that when a week arrives where candidates need to look presidential, they scramble to figure out how.
©2008 Institute for Global Ethics
Questions or comments? Write to newsline@globalethics.org.
“It’s a really inadequate situation that we’ve allowed to continue. We have a regulation where, as far as I can tell, there’s no effort to enforce it.”
– Rep. Howard Berman (D-Calif.), chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, speaking last week before hearings into the reported failure of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to “curb the export of discarded electronic products containing hazardous waste, much of which ends up in poorly regulated countries and harms the environment and public health,” according to the Washington Post. The EPA was criticized last week in a report from the Government Accountability Office, which cited widespread agency failure in enforcing new rules requiring the EPA to control such hazardous exports. The EPA says it’s making progress.
Source: Washington Post, Sep. 17.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Aug. 22, 2005 — Related Newsline story, Mar. 15, 2004 — Related Newsline story, Mar. 3, 2003.
Among the questions: Was impending meltdown caused by greed and recklessness? Does bailout reward bad behavior? Should taxpayers foot the bill for executives’ mistakes?
NEW YORK and WASHINGTON
One of the largest proposed government bailouts in financial history, a move designed to head off what many view as an impending catastrophic collapse of the economy, has raised ethics questions not only about the propriety of the bailout but also about the moral climate that led to the meltdown.
Philadelphia Inquirer staff writer Linda Loyd examined the origins of the near-collapse over the weekend, noting that while “proper risk management gets drummed into students,” various business-ethics and finance professors maintain that when times are good, ethics and risk frequently are forsaken for easy money and greed.
Loyd quotes Thomas Donaldson, an ethics and legal-studies professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, as predicting that ethics discussions now are likely to focus on relationships between government and business, particularly the financial services industry. In the current crisis, buyers were given loans “when they had no money to put down and no reliable credit,” Donaldson said. “Rating agencies were greedy as they marked assets as more secure than they should have been,” he added.
In much the same way, Wall Street securitized home loans and let collateralized debt obligations pile up recklessly, according to Donaldson. “People on Wall Street knew better and tried to make money in a way that was too risky.”
Another group of investors also have been cited as villains in the story, according to Los Angles Times business columnist Tom Petruno.
“After the collapse of Enron Corp. in 2001, Wall Street ’short sellers’ were hailed as heroes for helping to expose the company’s massive accounting fraud,” Petruno writes.
“Seven years later, the ’shorts’ — traders who borrow stock and sell it, expecting to profit from falling prices — are the reviled black hats of global markets. They have been damned by regulators and politicians who say they’re largely responsible for the meltdown in bank and brokerage stocks that brought the financial system to its knees this week.”
Regulators in the United States, Britain, Australia, and several other nations banned short selling last week, provoking protest from those who claim that short sellers merely are an easy target for lawmakers desperate to be perceived as taking action, the Times of London reports.
The short-selling ban was part of the United States’s sweeping proposal to put up about $700 billion in taxpayer money to buy up toppling mortgage-related assets — a plan that the San Francisco Chronicle estimates would represent more than $2,000 in tax obligations for every man, woman, and child in the country.
While the bailout has received widespread — if tentative — bipartisan endorsement, it also has been the focus of anger from both the right and the left, with detractors arguing that it rewards reckless investment, imposes an unfair burden on the middle class, and shifts the burden from Wall Street executives to Main Street taxpayers.
Some lawmakers, including House Financial Services chair Barney Frank (D-Mass.) say they expects Wall Street executives to give up a share of pay and perks in exchange for the intervention, according to a report from Bloomberg.
“If you want to participate in this, if you want your company to be the beneficiary of us buying up this paper, you have got to accept compensation guidelines that will remove this one-way street and provide an incentive structure that does not need too much risk taking,” Frank said.
Sources: Washington Post, Sep. 22 — Philadelphia Inquirer, Sep. 21 — San Francisco Chronicle, Sep. 21 — Los Angeles Times, Sep. 20 — Bloomberg, Sep. 20 — Times of London, Sep. 19 — MarketWatch, Sep. 19.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Sep. 15 — Related Newsline story, Sep. 8 — Related Newsline story, July 14 — Related Newsline story, July 7 — Related Newsline story, June 16.
Made-in-China label tarnished again as press reports say milk was adulterated on purpose — watered down, with a toxic additive used to make it appear more normal
BEIJING
The most recent product-adulteration scandal to hit China widened considerably last week, with tests now showing that liquid milk also was contaminated by melamine, a chemical used in the manufacture of plastics and fertilizers.
While the contamination originally was thought to be confined to powdered infant milk formula, Chinese officials have confirmed that the toxic chemical melamine was found in 10 percent of the liquid milk samples taken from three of the nation’s biggest dairy suppliers.
Roughly 54,000 infants have become ill with kidney ailments due to the contamination. Four children have died, another 100 remain critically ill, and nearly 13,000 people remain in hospital after consuming contaminated milk products, reports the Guardian.
As news of the wider contamination spread, China’s chief food-safety regulator, Li Changjiang, resigned, walking away from his post without giving an official reason as of Monday, reports the Wall Street Journal.
Chinese officials have ordered all dairy facilities to be inspected and promised free medical care to all babies sickened by the adulterated milk, reports official state media agency Xinhua.
The Agence France-Presse reports that some Chinese investigators and journalists suspect that the chemical may have been introduced into milk products to cut costs. One of the effects of melamine is to boost the apparent protein content and make watered-down milk appear normal.
Various Chinese press reports contend that the practice has been going on for years, and that China’s corrupt and chaotic food safety system was unable or unwilling to stop it.
Sources: Guardian, Sep. 22 — Wall Street Journal Sep. 22 — CNN, Sep. 22 — CNN, Sep. 21 — Voice of America, Sep. 19 — AFP, Sep. 19 — Xinhua, Sep. 19.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Sep. 8 — Related Newsline story, Aug. 25 — Related Newsline story, Aug. 11 — Related Newsline story, Aug. 4 — Related Newsline story, July 14.
Alaska probe suddenly vaults into prominence; New York congressman says political opponents and the media are behind his ethics problems; civic groups want ethics reform in Albany
VARIOUS DATELINES
A handful of stories took center stage at the intersection of politics and ethics last week. Among them:
Sources: Los Angeles Times, Sep. 21 — TIME, Sep. 19 — CBS News, Sep. 19 — Newsday, Sep. 19 — Capital News 9, Sep. 19 — New York Times, Sep. 16.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Sep. 15 — Related Newsline Commentary, Sep. 8 — Related Newsline story, Sep. 8 — Related Newsline story, July 28 — Related Newsline story, Mar. 31 — Palin and Troopergate primer, from TIME, Sep. 11.
Prosecutors say defendant actually worked for the mob; thickening the plot is a deal offered to a hit man to testify against the agent — 12 years for 20 murders
MIAMI
One of the biggest scandals in recent law enforcement history unfolded last week in Miami as a former FBI agent went on trial for murder and conspiracy.
Former FBI agent John Connolly is accused of leaking information that resulted in the procurement of a hit man to murder an accountant, reports the Miami Herald.
Among the moral twists to the story is the allegation that Connolly, who developed the notorious Boston mobster Whitey Bulger as a secret informer, eventually turned into one of Bulger’s henchmen, reports Boston radio station WBUR.
John Martorano, a reputed hit man, last week testified that Connolly ordered him to kill the accountant because mobsters feared he might cooperate with law enforcement, according to reports from the Hartford Courant.
In addition to the purported involvement of an FBI agent in mob activities, press attention has focused on the fact that the admitted hit man has been allowed to go free after serving just 12 years for 20 murders.
The Boston Globe reports that the former head of the Massachusetts State Police said that investigators had “sleepless nights” after offering Martorano a deal in exchange for his testimony.
Foley said the deal was necessary because without it investigators would not have been able to solve the homicides or root out corruption in law enforcement.
Connolly, who retired from the FBI in 1990, is serving a 10-year stretch in federal prison for a 2002 racketeering conviction based on charges that he warned Bulger about an impending indictment.
The jury has not been informed that Connolly is a convicted felon, reports the Globe.
Sources: Boston Globe, Sep. 19 — Hartford Courant, Sep. 19 — WBUR, Sep. 19 — Miami Herald, Sep. 19.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Aug. 4 — Related Newsline story, Feb. 4 — Related Newsline story, Nov. 13, 2007 — Related Newsline story, May 14, 2007.
Demonstrators rally against psychologists’ participation in interrogations; think tank warns that brain-boosting drugs may have to be subsidized by schools in order to ease education gap between rich and poor; high-profile disclosure of results of a DNA test spur debate
VARIOUS DATELINES
Moral obligations related to health care providers were featured in several news reports last week. Among the stories:
Sources: Parade, Sep. 21– New York Times, Sep. 19 — InformationWeek, Sep. 19 — USA Today, Sep. 19 — Daily Telegraph, Sep. 19.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Aug. 25 — Related Newsline story, Sep. 17, 2007 — Related Newsline story, Apr. 7 — Related Newsline story, Apr. 23, 2007 — Related Newsline story, Aug. 15, 2006.
Ethical aspects of multitasking also highlighted by related story: Study shows that driving while texting is more dangerous than driving while drunk
LOS ANGELES and LONDON
The ethics of multitasking were the focus of several news reports last week, including a New York Times report that California train regulators have banned the use of cellular devices by anyone at the controls of a moving train.
According to the Times, the order came after an announcement from the National Transportation Safety Board that the engineer of a train that crashed on September 12 was sending and receiving text messages while at the controls.
Sky News notes that investigators, who examined the engineer’s phone records, have not said exactly when the messages were sent nor whether they believe the messaging contributed to the tragedy.
The commuter train ran a red light and collided with a freight train, killing 25 and injuring 135, the Los Angeles Times reports.
In related news, Reuters reports that a new study by Britain’s Transport Research Laboratory found that sending text messages from a mobile phone while driving is more dangerous than getting behind the wheel under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Researchers found that drivers’ reaction rates plummeted and safe-driving behaviors diminished by larger margins when texting than when impaired by chemicals.
Sources: Los Angeles Times, Sep. 20 — New York Times, Sep. 19 — Reuters, Sep. 18 — Sky News, Sep. 18.
For more information, see: Related Newsline story, June 9 — Related Newsline story, May 27 — Related Newsline Commentary, Mar. 10 — Related Newsline story, Nov. 13, 2007 — Related Newsline Commentary, Nov. 5, 2007.