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USADA: Lance Armstrong Was Part Of The Most Sophisticated And Successful Doping Program Cycling Has Ever Seen

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Lance ArmstrongThe United States Anti-Doping Agency will release a file Wednesday providing the most comprehensive evidence in proving Lance Armstrong's alleged use of performance-enhancing drugs.

The information will also be sent to the Union Cycliste International (UCI), the sport's governing body, the World Anti-Doping Agency and the World Triathlon Corporation

USADA's CEO Travis T. Tygart explained the details of the evidence in the statement:

The evidence of the US Postal Service Pro Cycling Team-run scheme is overwhelming and is in excess of 1000 pages, and includes sworn testimony from 26 people, including 15 riders with knowledge of the US Postal Service Team (USPS Team) and its participants’ doping activities. The evidence also includes direct documentary evidence including financial payments, emails, scientific data and laboratory test results that further prove the use, possession and distribution of performance enhancing drugs by Lance Armstrong and confirm the disappointing truth about the deceptive activities of the USPS Team, a team that received tens of millions of American taxpayer dollars in funding.

Tygart said 11 of Armstrong's teammates came forward and testified against him, breaking the omerta, or the widespread rule of silence about doping in the sport.

The report says Armstrong was part of “the most sophisticated, professionalized and successful doping program that sport has ever seen.”

We'll have lots more when the USADA releases the evidence this afternoon.

UPDATE: A key teammate of Armstrong's, George Hincapie, has just come clean.

To read the entire statement from the USADA, click here >>

DON'T MISS: Here Are The Doping Allegations Against Lance Armstrong That We Know About So Far >

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Girl In Roman Polanski Case Is About To Go Public With A Massive Tell-All

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roman polanski

After being labeled the "sex victim girl" and ostracized by friends' parents, the girl at the heart of director Roman Polanski's 1977 sex scandal is speaking out.

Polanski was arrested decades ago after he was accused of feeding then-13-year-old Samantha Geimer part of a Quaalude and champagne before raping her.

But in a statement about her tell-all book, expected to be published next year, the now-47-year-old says she isn't angry, she just wants her story told, The Wall Street Journal's Speakeasy blog reported Tuesday.

From Geimer's statement:

“I am more than ‘Sex Victim Girl,’ a tag the media pinned on me. My friends in junior high, scolded by their parents to stay away from that girl, also labeled me. I offer my story now without rage, but with purpose — to share a tale that in its detail will reclaim my identity. I have been dogged by tired thinking and easy tags nearly my entire life. I am not a stick figure. I know what it is like to be a woman and a victim in the realest possible way.”

The saga has sparked headlines for decades after Polanski pleaded guilty to one count of unlawful sexual intercourse and then fled to France hours before he was scheduled to be sentenced.

He was held under house arrest in Switzerland for years after the country refused to deport him to the U.S.

DON'T MISS: Immigration Agents Are Calling This Russian Immigrant A Hooker But She Says She Was Framed >

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The Most Liberal And Conservative Law Schools In America

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Boston democrat donkey

What law school best fits your political views?

The Princeton Review has surveyed more than 18,000 students at 168 law schools and using that information, has compiled a list of the most liberal and most conservative law schools in America.

Here are the two extremes on the political scale:

Most Liberal Students: Northeastern University — Boston, Mass.

The school's left-leaning tendency is no surprise considering that it's located in Boston. The city has a Democratic mayor and the state overall is strongly Democratic

NU also made a statement in February when its student body voted against Chick-fil-A's plans to open up on campus. The student senate voted 31 to 5 against having a Chick-fil-A on campus amid concerns over the chain's anti-gay stances, according to The Boston Globe. 

Most Conservative Students: Ave Maria School of Law — (currently Naples, Fla.)

The school was founded in 1999 by Domino's Pizza founder Thomas Monaghan as a conservative, Catholic law institution. It moved from its original location in Michigan to Naples, Florida in 2009.

Monaghan himself is a supporter of the pro-life movement and other conservative causes

 For more law school rankings, go to Princeton Review's website

SEE ALSO: The 10 Best Paying Career Alternatives For Law Grads >

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This Pakistani Legal Case Could Be The Precedent That Remakes US Drone Policy

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Pakistan

A case that pits US government policy on drone strikes in Pakistan against the body of international law is set in the besieged Northwest Frontier Province, where Noor Khan is the plaintiff in a lawsuit on behalf of his father who was killed along with more than 40 others while leading a tribal council.

Was this father, Daud Khan, and the other civilians' deaths ‘extrajudicial murder’ or ‘justified collateral damage’ in war? The question speaks to two starkly different legal conclusions and a fork in the road of international law when it comes to the use of drones, particularly amid the Obama administration’s expanded use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, or UAVs.

The drone attack in question — on March 17, 2011 — killed 42 people. Four were confirmed Pakistani Taliban members and the rest were reportedly civilians, including tribal elders such as Khan’s father who were attending the tribal council, which was focused on a conflict over 

The assembly, known as a ‘jirga,’ has deep tradition in Pashtun culture and in this instance was aimed at settling the land dispute before it turned violent. But the gathering ended when suspected CIA drones fired several missiles at the meeting place.

Khan’s family filed suit in the High Court of the Peshawar province against the government of Pakistan. Khan seeks redress in the form of action, asking the Pakistani government to pursue and criminally charge those involved with the strike, both inside and outside the country. He is arguing that the government failed in its legal duty to protect the life and liberty of its citizens, per Article 9 of the Pakistani Constitution.

The case currently awaits a final judgment and faces several hurdles, with the next hearing scheduled for Oct. 23. Khan's case is one of only a few petitions filed by a surviving relative over the killing of a civilian in an American drone attack and faces generally tenuous chances of success in a convoluted Pakistani legal system, a mix of of British common law and Islamic law divided into five jurisdictions, with higher and lower courts in each jurisdiction.

More importantly, the case will almost definitely fail to lay a finger on the United States government, the party ultimately responsible for the drone strike. Nevertheless, it is an apt lens through which to analyze great legal questions that extend beyond the case.

The lawfulness of predatory drone strikes dredges up a body of international legal questions. Drone strikes are state conduct, or at least “suspected” state conduct, and all state actors are bound by international law, which is comprised of customary practice and treaties. International law is rooted in both primary sources (i.e. principles of law rooted in treaties such as the UN Charter and the Geneva Convention) and customary international law (i.e. universally accepted practice).

At court in Pakistan, Khan’s quest for recourse over his father’s death hinges on a paradox: predatory drone strikes pose familiar legal questions, but answering those questions using existing laws treads unfamiliar territory.

Until now, international law and conventions have addressed the traditional combat context of war: troops in uniform killing other troops in uniform. As modern military methods shift from conventional warfare to combating terrorism through targeted killings, how do these laws apply to the US killing a terrorist disguised as a civilian?

What crimes, if any, does the US commit when a soldier carries out the killing from a cubicle using a joystick to operate the predatory drone? The answers to these questions will largely determine whether or not individuals like Khan are left empty-handed by the law.

When the United States targets and kills civilians with drones, it is bound by both domestic and international law. US domestic laws pose their own set of legal questions, mainly regarding oversight of drone operations by Congress, the US military and the CIA. However, even assuming that the United States’ conduct is completely justifiable under its own laws, the country must still answer to international law which binds states under a neutral set of conduct rules.  

“To my knowledge, there are no legal efforts underway to prosecute the US for the killings of civilians in its conflicts abroad. The debate

in the US right now is over the issue of whether targeted killings are legal or not,” said Hina Shamsi of NYU Law School.

Khan, along with a human rights group, has also filed a case in the United Kingdom against the Foreign Secretary on the basis of his purported complicity in the US strikes in Waziristan. However this comparatively small number of legal cases has not stopped a colossal debate from ensuing over the general legality of drone killings.

Predatory drone strikes pose two fundamental legal questions. The first is a sovereign rights inquiry: When can one state invade a foreign state’s territory to kill an individual without the foreign state’s permission? This only affects state rights, in the case of the March 17 strike, Pakistan’s rights.

The more controversial second question is, irrespective of the sovereignty issue, when does a government have the right to use deadly force against an individual? The answer to the latter establishes victims’ rights and divides the international legal community. This question directly addresses whether Khan, an individual and son of a civilian drone victim, has a claim against the United States.

In general terms, killing an individual without trial is extrajudicial murder unless it qualifies as self-defense. However, during times of war, the so-called ‘rules of war’ are less restrictive and a state can use deadly force against enemy combatants. In the traditional war setting, combatants are easily identifiable as uniformed soldiers belonging to the enemy state.

The identification of a terrorist is much more complicated than that of an enemy combatant in a traditional war context. The jirga where Khan’s father died is a textbook instance of this complication: the meeting was a group of over nearly 50 people, some reportedly affiliated with the Taliban and the rest local elders, apparently coming together to settle a local administrative matter.

An enemy combatant joins the military, arms himself and bears a uniform during his service. Terrorists could be living civilian lives after their incriminating acts, or they might be active criminals disguised as civilians. In either case, killing a suspected terrorist with a drone almost inevitably involves civilian deaths.

What individual rights do the deceased targets and civilians have against the drone-striking country? It depends on the applicable set of international law: international human rights law or the laws of war. The choice of applicable law is determined by whether these targeted drone strikes are part of an armed conflict and this is precisely the issue that splits the legal community.

The United States has a clear stance: We are at war and the rules of war apply to drone strikes. Kenneth Anderson, professor of international law at Washington College of Law and a visiting fellow at the Hoover Institution, explains “[The United States] just says, and this is even more true of the Obama administration than the Bush administration, ‘This is an armed conflict.’ There is no daylight between all three branches of government on how to view this and it is viewed as an armed conflict.”

Under this interpretation of international law, the rules of war govern drone strikes, justifying the use of deadly force against targets and taking into account collateral damage, such as the tribal elders at the meeting where Khan’s father died. Furthermore, this view holds that enemy combatants are participants in the armed conflict wherever they go, so striking targets who are located in Pakistan is fair game under the rules of war.

Opponents take the stance that these strikes are not part of an armed conflict and the rules of war, thus, do not apply. The armed conflict claim is a legal fiction and the United States is cherry picking the legal framework that protects its conduct under the rules of war, thus doing indirectly what they cannot do directly under international human rights laws. Shamsi contends, “I think the key issue here is that the US is claiming that the laws of war apply in places where they absolutely do not apply.”

Contrary to the US stance, this interpretation holds that, regarding Anderson’s explanation, “There is no war going on in a legal sense, and if there is, it is strictly limited to hot battlefields of Afghanistan. [Drone strikes are] governed by standards of international human rights and domestic law, and therefore any killings that take place under the circumstances are not protected by the law of war and instead are just extrajudicial executions, and frankly murder.”

However, some have implied that the existence of only two black and white legal conclusions — all out combat or none at all — is unrealistic. Perhaps the legal community has painted itself into a corner of two extremes that do not account for what is in reality a grey area. The grey area is that predatory drones are part of modern armed conflicts, but the application of existing rules of war may be abused as a blanket license for indiscriminate drone strikes. A middle ground may exist in the form of mandating transparency from the government trying to use drones in armed conflicts.

British human rights lawyer Clive Stafford Smith, a proponent of this perspective, explains, “All I really want to see is an honest, open, and transparent discussion. I don’t want the American soldiers getting killed . . . but on the other hand the danger of having more systems that create no jeopardy is it makes it much easier for us as Americans to go around killing people . . . You know people always put two ridiculous alternatives there is always a third option, and in this case there are lots of options.”

NOW SEE: How Iran Changed American Drone Development Forever >

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11 Of Lance Armstrong's Teammates Testified Against Him To The USADA

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Lance Armstrong

The USADA is releasing a full report of evidence that Lance Armstrong was doping during his cycling career.

Eleven of Armstrong's former teammates testified against the seven-time Tour de France winner saying he used performance enhancing drugs.

The teammates who testified against Armstrong were: Frankie Andreu, Michael Barry, Tom Danielson, Tyler Hamilton, George Hincapie, Floyd Landis, Levi Leipheimer, Stephen Swart, Christian Vande Velde, Jonathan Vaughters, and David Zabriskie.

USADA CEO Travis Tygart said in a press release:

“It took tremendous courage for the riders on the USPS Team and others to come forward and speak truthfully. It is not easy to admit your mistakes and accept your punishment. But that is what these riders have done for the good of the sport, and for the young riders who hope to one day reach their dreams without using dangerous drugs or methods.

“The riders who participated in the USPS Team doping conspiracy and truthfully assisted have been courageous in making the choice to stop perpetuating the sporting fraud, and they have suffered greatly. In addition to the public revelations, the active riders have been suspended and disqualified appropriately in line with the rules. In some part, it would have been easier for them if it all would just go away; however, they love the sport, and they want to help young athletes have hope that they are not put in the position they were — to face the reality that in order to climb to the heights of their sport they had to sink to the depths of dangerous cheating.”

The full report will be release some time Wednesday, we'll keep you updated as more comes out.

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Exotic Dancers Just Got $13 Million And A Lot More Respect From Strip Clubs

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Flashdance

It's been three years since the class action began, but it ends with something of a labor law victory for exotic dancers.

A federal judge has approved a $12.9 million settlement for strippers who claimed their employers helped themselves to their tips and paid less than minimum wage, among other indignities, the Courthouse News Service reports.

Under the settlement, a number of nightclubs will have to treat strippers as either employees or even as shareholders or partners in their ventures.

And in California, strippers won't have to pay the defendant nightclubs fees in order to perform, as they had to do before the settlement.

The nightclubs, 15 in total, allegedly also fined strippers for a huge list of things, including: for not selling enough drinks, for not being in full costume, for not offering specials, and for not wearing a uniform even though a uniform was not provided.

After legal costs, the massive settlement will go to dancers primarily in California and Nevada, with around seven percent being distributed to dancers in other states. 

SEE ALSO: Girl In Roman Polanski Case Is About To Go Public With A Massive Tell-All >

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NYPD Slaps Cyclist With The Biggest Red Light Ticket We've Seen

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You'd be hard-pressed to find an urban cyclist who hasn't run a red light on a deserted street, pedaled the wrong way down a one-way street, or sailed past stop signs once in a while. 

These are, of course, ticket-worthy offenses, but is it possible for police to take them too far? 

One Brooklyn cyclist says he was hit with a $1,555 ticket for running three red lights in a row. It's not why he was ticketed that has us stumped, but how

The cyclist, who asked the Gothamist to keep his name anonymous, says the officer admitted to following him the entire time before deciding to pull him over after the third light.

In total, he was charged $190 for the first light, $375 for the second, and $940 for the third. The headphones cost him another $50.

Sure, he was guilty, but we can't imagine a driver being followed for that long while a cop tallied up his traffic violations.

"This kind of following almost never happens with motorists," attorney Steve Vaccaro told the Gothamist. "But happens surprisingly often with cyclists."

The Grist's Sarah Laskow was even surprised. 

"The enmity between cyclists and cops in New York has been well documented, but this encounter doesn’t sound as contentious as it could have been," she writes. "Still, $1,555 is way, way more than drivers end up paying for, say, driving really, really fast on streets where children live."

The takeaway? Think twice before pleading guilty to duplicative traffic violations, like this cyclist did. Chances are you can convince a judge to drop the dupes if you protest the ticket face-to-face. 

See Also: 18 reasons you should bike to work >

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Justice Sotomayor Got Fierce During Today's Affirmative Action Fight

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Affirmative Action

The Supreme Court heard historic arguments today in 22-year-old Abigail Fisher's fight against the University of Texas at Austin's affirmative action policy.

At UT, the top 10 percent of students from every high school receive automatic admission. It considers a host of other factors–including race–for students who aren't admitted through the so-called "top 10" program.

Fisher's lawyer Bert Rein said he didn't think the court would necessarily have to overrule its 2003 affirmative action ruling in Grutter v. Bollinger.

Sotomayor accused Rein of wanting to "gut" Grutter, though.

In that case, the Supreme Court ruled the University of Michigan could use race as one factor to achieve a "critical mass" of minorities necessary for a diverse campus.

But Rein said the "odious classification" of race should be used narrowly.

"So, you don't want to overrule, Grutter, you just want to gut it," Sotomayor shot back, prompting Rein to say, "Excuse me?"

Sotomayor reiterated:

"You just want to gut it. You don't want to overrule it, but you just want to gut it ... Now you want to tell universities that once you reach a certain number, then you can't use race anymore."

It seems Sotomayor has cut to the heart of the issue. We'll have to wait and see whether a majority of the court wants to eviscerate its previous affirmative action decision.

SEE ALSO: Scalia's Anti-Gay Comments Are Nothing Compared To This Hateful Opinion On Sodomy Laws

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Starbucks Is Threatening To Take A Doggie Daycare To Court If It Doesn't Change Its Name And Logo

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starbarksAndrea McCarthy-Grzybek opened a dog daycare in Illinois earlier this year. Then, she got a letter from Starbucks telling her to change her daycare's name and logo — or else, reports Stephanie Zimmermann at the Chicago Sun-Times.

The problem?

The daycare is called Starbarks Dog Daycare, and its logo looks quite similar to the international coffee giant's.

“We have a legal obligation to protect our intellectual property ... in order to retain our exclusive rights to it,” a Starbucks spokesperson tells the Sun-Times. He said that Starbucks would prefer to keep things out of court, if possible.

Yes, it's true that the logos (and names) are similar. McCarthy-Grzybek says that she offered to change the colors and switch the stars to paws, but Starbucks wasn't having any of it.

So far, she has already spent about $2,000 in legal costs defending her doggie daycare. Funds are usually the biggest problems for small businesses trying to fight big corporations, although they do manage to win trademark disputes like this on occasion.

Here's what McCarthy-Grzybek had to say to her customers on Facebook:

"We at Starbarks Dog Daycare & Boarding are disappointed to announce that the coffee giant has sent us a cease and desist letter. They are demanding us to stop using our logo and the Starbarks Dog name. They are saying it violates their trademarked logo and name also it is likely to cause confusion among consumers. As disappointed as we are of their demands, it will not affect the day to day activities at Starbarks Dog Inc. We remain the same caring and loving facility for your dogs. I will keep you all informed on this issue"

NOW SEE: 15 Crazy Starbucks Customers Who Will Make You Never Want To Be A Barista >

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A Quick Guide To The Affirmative Action Showdown Currently In The Supreme Court

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On Wednesday the U.S. Supreme Court heard its most politically divisive case this term: a challenge to the University of Texas at Austin's affirmative action policy.

Here's everything you need to know about the case:

 

Produced by Robert Libetti

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Lance Armstrong's Team 'Ran The Most Sophisticated Doping Program Ever'

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Lance Armstrong

A devastating report into years of drug taking at Lance Armstrong's United States Postal Service team described the squad as running "the most sophisticated, professionalised and successful doping programme that sport has ever seen". The 1,000-page report from the US Anti-Doping Agency sets out its case against Armstrong with damning clarity, depicting the former cycling hero, US national icon and cancer-campaigning champion as a bully who coerced his team-mates into using drugs and a cheat who paid hundreds of thousands of dollars for doping programmes.

"His goal [of winning the Tour de France] led him to depend on EPO, testosterone and blood transfusions but also, more ruthlessly, to expect and to require that his team-mates would likewise use drugs to support his goals if not their own," concluded the report. "It was not enough that his team-mates give maximum effort on the bike, he also required that they adhere to the doping programme outlined for them or be replaced."

Armstrong fought back, as he always does, with his lawyers attacking the report as "a one-sided hatchet job, a taxpayer-funded tabloid piece rehashing old, disproved, unreliable allegations based largely on axe-grinders, serial perjurers, coerced testimony, sweetheart deals and threat-induced stories". A five-page letter from his lawyers, Timothy J Herman of Austin, Texas, also described Usada's case as "a taxpayer-funded witchhunt".

The most damaging testimony came from Armstrong's close friend and long-time team-mate George Hincapie, who is widely viewed as having no axe to grind. Hincapie states: "At a race in Spain in 2000 Lance indicated to me he had taken testosterone. Lance told me that he was feeling good and recovered, that he had just taken some 'oil'. When I heard that drug testing officials were at the hotel, I texted Lance to warn him to avoid the place ..."

He adds that in 2003 Armstrong used his apartment to have a blood transfusion. "In 2003 Lance Armstrong contacted me about needing to do something private at my apartment in Girona because he had guests at his apartment. I agreed and Lance came to my apartment with Dr Del Moral. Lance and Dr Del Moral went into my bedroom and Dr Del Moral was carrying what I thought was a blood bag. He asked to borrow a coat hanger and Lance and Dr Del Moral closed the door behind them. They were in the room about 45 minutes to an hour which is about the time it generally takes to re-infuse a bag of blood."

As well as the testimony of Tyler Hamilton – whose revelatory book has just been named on the shortlist for the William Hill Sports Book of the Year – and Floyd Landis, both of whom testified after their personal fights against doping positives proved fruitless, the report lists nine witnesses who have no blot on their escutcheons: Frankie Andreu, Michael Barry, Tom Danielson, Hincapie, Levi Leipheimer, Stephen Swart, Christian Vande Velde, Jonathan Vaughters and David Zabriskie. Of these, only Vande Velde, Danielson, Zabriskie and Leipheimer are still racing – Hincapie and Barry retired a few weeks ago – and they will face nominal six-month bans which will enable them to race again next season.

The Canadian Barry and Vaughters have both been proponents of anti-doping since leaving Armstrong's service; Vaughters was the founder of the Garmin-Slipstream squad which has been at the forefront of anti-doping since its inception in 2007, while Barry, who has combined cycling and writing up to his retirement a few weeks ago, has spoken out against the practice in his published work.

Vande Velde and Barry describe being put in a position where they were left with no option but to dope. "I was in the doghouse and ... the only way forward with Armstrong's team was to get fully on Dr Ferrari's doping program," said Vande Velde, referring to Armstrong's trainer Michele Ferrari. Barry said: "After being encouraged by the team, pressured to perform and pushed to my physical limits, I crossed a line I promised myself and others I would not: I doped."

Zabriskie's evidence is similar, and is the more harrowing because he had come to cycling to avoid drugs, after his father's life had been shortened by addiction. "He had embraced cycling to escape a life seared by drugs and now he felt that he could not say no and stay in his mentor's good graces," states the report. "When he went back to his room that night he cried."

The report also claims to have evidence that Armstrong paid over a million dollars to Ferrari – whom he apparently nicknamed "Schumi" after the German Formula One driver: "The evidence in this case also includes banking and accounting records from a Swiss company controlled by Dr Ferrari reflecting more than one million dollars in payments by Mr Armstrong, extensive email communications between Dr Ferrari and his son and Mr Armstrong during a time period in which Mr Armstrong claimed to not have a professional relationship with Dr Ferrari and a vast amount of additional data, including laboratory test results and expert analysis of Mr Armstrong's blood test results."

The report quotes email correspondence from Stefano Ferrari to Armstrong in which Ferrari junior appears to be passing on training advice from "Schumi," in 2009, after Armstrong had returned to cycling and when he had stated publicly that they were no longer working together.

The initial paragraphs of the report's "Reasoned decision" include an utterly damning passage about Armstrong's era: "Twenty of the twenty-one podium finishers in the Tour de France from 1999 through 2005 have been directly tied to likely doping through admissions, sanctions, public investigations or exceeding the UCI hematocrit threshold. Of the forty-five (45) podium finishes during the time period between 1996 and 2010, thirty-six (36) were by riders similarly tainted by doping."

Usada's chief executive, Travis Tygart, described what went on at US Postal as a "systemic, sustained and highly professionalised team-run doping conspiracy," adding: "The USPS Team doping conspiracy was professionally designed to groom and pressure athletes to use dangerous drugs, to evade detection, to ensure its secrecy and ultimately gain an unfair competitive advantage through superior doping practices."

This article originally appeared on guardian.co.uk

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Law School Tuition Is About To Jump To The Most Outrageous Levels Yet

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Jobs in the legal industry are extremely difficult to come by.

And law schools across the country are admitting fewer and fewer students to cope with the shrinking job market.

But it's about to get even worse, according to legal blogger Matt Leichter who recently projected major tuition across the board.

By the 2021-2022 school year, Cornell Law School students can expect to shell out $79,800 and Yale Law School scholars aren't much better off, with an expected tuition of $76,300, according to charts Leichter posted at The Law School Tuition Bubble.

Check out just how much tuition is expected to leap at some of the top schools:

law school tuition jump

Put another, even more depressing way:

law school tuition jump

Leichter used past tuition rates to predict future ones and only estimated for tuition — not extra fees like books or cost of living — so the real price tag will be even worse, according to Above The Law.

As if things weren't bad enough, check out the 10 law schools with the most student debt >

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Dangerously Friendly Emails Support Claims Of Collusion Between Equity Firms

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George Clooney Brad Pitt

The last time we checked in with the "club deal" collusion scandal rocking the private equity industry, a Boston Judge had ordered the firms involved to refile documents, as the ones that they had submitted to the Court had too many redactions.

Well now the new documents are in, and without the redactions, they are embarrassing.

Here's the case: Shareholders have accused a bunch of private equity titans like KKR, Blackstone, Bain Capital and more, of colluding to keep the prices of take-over target companies down, and agreeing on who would buy what. The prosecution is alleging that these firms engaged in bid-rigging, or made "club deals," to eliminate good old fashioned competition.

Peter Lattman and Eric Lichtbaum The New York Times have published some bits of these documents for us to check out, and they show that the heads of these private equity firms had a warm relationship, to say the least.

Take, for example, this 2006 exchange between KKR head Henry Kravis and Blackstone president Hamilton E. James. The firms were competing over a tech company called Freescale Semiconductor, and Blackstone had outbid KKR.

That's when James e-mailed this note to his colleagues about a call he'd gotten from Kravis (from the NYT):

“Henry Kravis just called to say congratulations and that they were standing down because he had told me before they would not jump a signed deal of ours,” Mr. James wrote.

Two days later, Mr. James sent an e-mail to Mr. Kravis’s cousin and co-founder, George R. Roberts. “We would much rather work with you guys than against you,” Mr. James wrote. “Together we can be unstoppable but in opposition we can cost each other a lot of money.”

“Agreed,” responded Mr. Roberts.

And there's this too. In 2006 Bain, KKR, and Merrill Lynch did the biggest leveraged buy-out deal of all time when they bought hospital chain HCA (it cost $32 billion). Before they paid up, though, they allegedly asked everyone else in the industry to stand down.

From the NYT:

K.K.R. expressly asked its competitors to “step down on HCA” and not bid on the company, according to an e-mail that was unsealed and written by Daniel Akerson, then a partner at Carlyle and now the chief executive of General Motors. The complaint includes several other e-mails explaining the lack of competition in the bidding for HCA.

Two colleagues at the private equity firm TPG e-mailed each other about the firm’s reasons for deciding to not compete for HCA, according to the lawsuit.

“All we can do is do [u]nto others as we want them to do unto us,” Jonathan Coslet, a TPG executive, wrote. “It will pay off in the long run even though it feels bad in the short run.”

Attorneys for the defense insist that their clients are innocent of all charges, and that the industry is highly competitive.

Also, NYT points out that Presidential candidate and former Bain executive Mitt Romney is not mentioned in any of these documents, though shareholders insist that he "reaped millions of dollars from profits that may have been illegally inflated by underpriced acquisitions."

Let's see how this goes.

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George Zimmerman's Attorney Says Brother's Twitter Rant Made Him Cringe

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Robert Zimmerman and George Zimmerman's brother

Seven months after the killing of unarmed high school junior Trayvon Martin, the killer's family is on a national media crusade to clear the family's name.

What began as a series of routine media interviews denying that George Zimmerman is a racist blew up into a Twitter rant Monday night. Zimmerman's brother, Robert Zimmerman Jr., took to social media after midnight and vowed to make it his life's work to have one of the Martin family attorneys disbarred. He said he would expose the lawyers and their publicist, "one by one, day by day."

"I hope GOD grants you a long life so you live to repent for what you have done," Robert Zimmerman Jr. wrote in a tweet directed to Natalie Jackson, one of the lawyers for the slain teen's family.

In another, he wrote: "My Life's work = you WILL be held accountable for your words/actions. You AINT seen NOTHIN' yet... I will see U disbarred."

The flap underscored the heated rhetoric still notable regarding an incident that polarized the nation, and the extent to which legal advisors in the case were blamed for it. The threats posted online also highlighted the difficulty the Zimmermans have had managing their message, and the defense team's inability to control the client -- or his family.

Defense attorney Mark O'Mara said he cringed when he saw a relative of his client acting out on the web, and said the new media tour was launched without George Zimmerman's knowledge. His message to Robert Jr: "Be careful with my case."

"I have been cautious with how we act in this case and now someone with the same last name who does not act with the same constraints is out there -- and I have no control over him," O'Mara said. "They felt it was time to let the world know that the Zimmerman family is a good family. That goal is a noble goal.

"But they do have to be sensitive to the environment in which we are telling this story. No matter what, George is still at risk here. And we still have a dead young man -- that's fresh on everyone's mind. That frustrates me."

The family's media campaign follows months of public relations debacles.

Last month, Zimmerman's best friend published a book riddled with errors that offered a new accounting of how Trayvon died. It wound up on the prosecution's evidence list.

Zimmerman's neighbor, who did more than 100 TV interviews on Zimmerman's behalf, was arrested on a DUI charge, and the video of his arrest was posted on the Internet. A co-worker was discredited on national television when it seemed he hardly even knew Zimmerman.

The family did very few interviews, but complained vehemently about their portrayal in the press. In July, Zimmerman's parents, Robert and Gladys, launched a website to raise money for their life in hiding and to share details about their son, who they described as a longtime altar boy who donated blood, mentored black children and collected clothes for the homeless.

After Zimmerman's best friend published his book that included a scene that depicted the so-called "most hated man in America" as wildly paranoid against blacks, Robert Jr. took control of the family image himself.

In an email sent to several reporters last week, Robert Jr., 31, said his family sent him to Los Angeles to do a series of local television interviews aimed at "reintroducing the Zimmerman family." He stressed that he was the only authorized spokesman for the family.

"For far too long, we have kept silent about our plight at the hands of those who made assertions about our family members that were false," he wrote. "Many assertions made about my brother have now proven to be false as well."

The family believes they were skewered by the "national media machine" that did not uncover hard facts, but instead was manipulated into destroying the Zimmermans' lives. He made a reference to what critics have dubbed the "scheme team:" attorneys Jackson and Benjamin Crump and Orlando publicist Ryan Julison.

Conservative critics accuse the three of orchestrating a false narrative about the case for their own profit, presumably a payout from the insurance policy of the homeowner's association where Zimmerman lived.

In the past week, Robert Jr. appeared on Geraldo Rivera's show, Univision's Despierta America, and several radio and TV shows out of Los Angeles. His assignment: to read a condolence letter to Trayvon's parents and paint his brother as a married, working, college student who was attacked by Trayvon and libeled in the press.

Robert Jr. denied a request by The Miami Herald for an interview.

On Monday, he appeared on Piers Morgan Tonight with his mother, her face obscured. Gladys Zimmerman froze at probing questions and offered condolences only after she was pressed by the show's host.

Once the show was over, Robert Jr. reacted strongly to tweets referring to comments his mother made about a 2010 case of a homeless black man beaten by a Sanford cop's son. Her son, Gladys Zimmerman said, was the only one who helped the man.

The homeless man was represented by Jackson, the Martin family lawyer, who grew up in Sanford and has a solid Twitter following that enjoys her sarcastic remarks about the case. On Monday, she alluded to him being a "murderer" and suggested that his brother's CNN appearance was a fundraising drive.

That's when Robert Jr. responded with a series of tweets threatening her license. She quipped back: "Please see my Rule #1: Never argue with a fool, onlookers may not be able to tell the difference -- Mark Twain."

In an email Tuesday, Robert Jr. stood by his twitter tirade.

"I don't want her to be able to use her position as an attorney to assassinate anyone else's character or to ever hurt anyone else's family," he said.

Jackson dismissed the spat, saying she could not be sure if the person who posted the threats was really Zimmerman's brother.

"I don't take stuff personally from family members," Jackson said in an interview. "I do criminal defense work and I understand how families react. I don't think people should attack them or threaten them in any way. It's stressful when someone you love is possibly going to jail for life."

Zimmerman, 29, is charged with second-degree murder for the Feb. 26 shooting of Trayvon, 17, who was spending the weekend at a Central Florida townhouse complex. Zimmerman called police when he thought the teen looked suspicious, and minutes later the two were tussling on the grass.

Zimmerman says he was forced to shoot Trayvon, who attacked him. Prosecutors say Zimmerman, a former neighborhood watch volunteer, profiled the teenager and has no claim to self defense.

Attorney Crump said he preferred not to comment on the tweet directed at him by Zimmerman's brother.

"We are trying to stay focused on holding the killer responsible for the death of Trayvon. We're trying to keep it there," he said. "Name-calling doesn't get us anywhere." ___

(c)2012 The Miami Herald

Visit The Miami Herald at www.miamiherald.com

Distributed by MCT Information Services

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PATHETIC: A Student Is Suing Her High School Because It Suspended Her For Cheating

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Stuyvesant High SchoolMore than 15 million lawsuits are expected to be filed in America this year.

More than 15 million!

So clearly, we've got a bit of a problem of people suing each other, often over something ridiculous.

Case in point: a student at a prominent New York City high is school suing the school because she got caught allegedly cheating.

An unnamed girl is suing Stuyvesant High School after she and a handful of students were suspended for cheating, claiming the suspension — and the fact her test scores were declared null and void — is going to ruin her chances at getting into a good college, according to the New York Post.

"Every college admissions officer in the country is aware of the scandal at Stuyvesant," her lawyer Michael Rakower told The Wall Street Journal. "In this world of highly competitive college applications, any red flag is likely to be the factor that's used against the applicant."

That's probably true. Competition to get into a top school is fierce. But you know what the biggest red flag should have been?

The fact that she got caught up in a cheating ring.

The resulting suspension is pretty justified in our opinion.

You're accused of breaking a major rule — cheating on national Regents tests is no small matter — and you got busted so just deal with it.

Learn from the experience, stop trying to wiggle out of a punishment that's probably deserved, and take responsibility for your actions.

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A Company Claiming To Be The World's First Facebook 'Search Engine' Sues The Networking Giant

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Profile Technology Ltd. has sued Facebook for allegedly breaking a 2008 agreement by cutting off its access to Facebook data, which it harvested to create its own Profile Engine, the suit states.

The Profile Engine is the world's first-ever dedicated search engine for Facebook accounts, according to Profile Technology, a New Zealand startup.

But that search engine relied on being able to access Facebook users' accounts.

Facebook cut off access in 2010, even going as far as deleting Profile's Facebook account and blocking its IQ Test application, the New Zealand company claims.

The networking giant also called Profile Technology's applications "spammy," the suit claims.

Facebook is denying the allegations.

"[We] will defend ourselves vigorously," a Facebook spokesperson told CNET, which first reported the suit.

SEE ALSO: Court Says It's OK For Employers To Hijack Your LinkedIn Account >

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You Could End Up Paying Millions If You Post The Lyrics To Bowie Or TLC Online

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It's a good day for copyright holders. 

In a first-of-its-kind decision, a California judge ruled on Wednesday that LiveUniverse had infringed the copyrights to 528 songs—TLC's "Don't Go Chasing Waterfalls" and David Bowie's "China Girl" among others—by posting their lyrics online, according to law firm Arent Fox, which represented the copyright owners.

That's right—the lyrics, not the song themselves.

The music publishers that hold the copyrights will get $12,500 per song, totaling a massive $6.6 million in damages, plus attorney fees, according to a press release mailed out by Arent Fox.

LiveUniverse, which is owned by MySpace co-founder Brad Greenspan, was also found to have illicitly posted unlicensed lyrics Van Morrison's "Moondance," and "Georgia on My Mind," by Ray Charles, according to the law firm.

We reached out to LiveUniverse but did not receive an immediate response.

SEE ALSO: A New Zealand Startup Says Facebook Embarked On A Campaign To Destroy It >

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Colorado Shooting Suspect Sports An Entirely Different Look As Lawyer Tries To Delay The Inevitable

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Don't expect to see this summer's most notorious criminal suspect in court any time soon.

Attorneys for James Holmes today asked Judge William Sylvester to delay the suspect's preliminary hearing until next year, claiming they have 18,000 pages of documents to get through and expect tens of thousands more, the Denver Post's Jessica Fender tweeted from the courtroom.

Holmes, who sported a moustache and mutton chops in court today, is suspected of killing 12 when he opened fire on a crowded movie theater during the midnight premiere of "The Dark Knight Rises."

Public defender Dan King also reportedly asked Sylvester to block any more open court records requests from the media.

Holmes' case has been one of the longest, craziest legal sagas in recent memory.

He was either lauded as a genius or criticized as anti-social by graduate school admissions offices and he allegedly sent a notebook full of stick figures killing other stick figures to his University of Colorado — Denver psychiatrist.

Holmes, who is facing 152 criminal charges, was reportedly banned from UC-Denver's campus after he threatened a teacher.

Courts documents were so heavily redacted it's impossible to know for sure who he allegedly threatened, but some news outlets have speculated it was his psychiatrist.

Attorneys argued today over whether the recently released court documents were too heavily redacted. Both sides agreed the redactions were "excessive" but have said they want to protect victims and witnesses.

The defense even went so far as to say the media is treating victims like "cannon fodder," claiming victims have been threatened and harassed, according to Fender.

Holmes' preliminary hearing will probably be held in January or February and will be the first time the public gets to see all the evidence against him.

Now See What Notorious Killers Looked Like As Kids >

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8 Law Schools With Terrible Employment Rates

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Just 85.6 percent of law students who earned a law degree in 2011 were employed nine months later. It's the lowest rate of employment since 1994.

For those graduates lucky enough to find themselves employed, only 55 percent of them secured "full-time, long-term jobs" that require a law degree.

And yet the law schools keep churning out students ...

We've identified some of the schools with the highest rates of unemployment and underemployment, based on data from the Wall Street JournalSchools are listed alphabetically.

Click here to see the schools >

This is part of our comprehensive ranking of The Best Law Schools in America.

#11 Western New England University School of Law, Springfield, Mass.

Unemployed, seeking employment: 21%

Employed in jobs requiring a JD: 30%

Passed the bar exam the first time: 66%

Average State Bar Passage Rate: 88%

Tuition: $38,116

According to US News, the average amount of student loan debt that Western New England University School of Law students from the class of 2011 were graduating with was $109,778. US News also reported that 93 percent of students graduated with debt.

Methodology: Tuition represented does not include the cost of living. The employment statistics represent law students from the graduating classes of 2011 nine months after graduation. Data was collected from the Wall Street Journal and the American Bar Association/Law School Admissions Council.



#10 University of Oregon School of Law, Eugene, Ore.

Unemployed, seeking employment: 21%

Employed in jobs requiring a JD: 41%

Passed the bar exam the first time: 75%

Average State Bar Passage Rate: 75%

Tuition: $28,348 for Oregon residents; $35,368 for non-residents

Despite the pride that follows being the State of Oregon's only public law school, the University of Oregon School of Law's rate of unemployment still clocks in at 21 percent. Unemployment aside, the school's first-time bar exam passage rate is right on par with the state average at 75 percent.

Methodology: Tuition represented does not include the cost of living. The employment statistics represent law students from the graduating classes of 2011 nine months after graduation. Data was collected from the Wall Street Journal and the American Bar Association/Law School Admissions Council.



#9 Pepperdine University School of Law, Malibu, Calif.

Unemployed, seeking employment: 23%

Employed in jobs requiring a JD: 43%

Passed the bar exam the first time: 87%

Average State Bar Passage Rate: 72%

Tuition: $44,920

Awaiting the 2012-2013 incoming class of students coming at Pepperdine University School of Law is an annual tuition of $44,920 and an unemployment rate of 23 percent from prior graduating classes.

Methodology: Tuition represented does not include the cost of living. The employment statistics represent law students from the graduating classes of 2011 nine months after graduation. Data was collected from the Wall Street Journal and the American Bar Association/Law School Admissions Council.



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Meet The Man Who's REALLY Behind The Supreme Court Affirmative Action Fight

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The U.S. Supreme Court's most divisive case this term–a challenge to the University of Texas' affirmative action policy–was brought in the name of a slight woman named Abigail Fisher, now 22 years old.

Fisher, who's white, was rejected from UT back in 2008. She's the named plaintiff in the suit fighting UT's policy of considering race as one of many factors when admitting students.

How would a young college student have the wherewithal to bring such a case on her own?

She had a little help from the Project on Fair Representation, a right-leaning legal defense fund that gets its money from libertarian nonprofit Donors Trust.

The Project on Fair Representation lists Fisher's fight among the current cases it's involved with, and presumably, bankrolling.

Despite its fancy name and big roster of cases, the Project on Fair Representation is really just a "one-man show" run by self-described autodidact Edward Blum, the Texas Tribune reported in February.

Blum has no law degree and formerly worked as an investment broker before taking up the affirmative action fight.

He implied that he hand-picked Fisher for the fight against affirmative action case, likening himself to "Yenta the matchmaker" when speaking to the Tribune.

Blum, a fellow at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute, has made a career of fighting affirmative action and what he calls "racially gerrymandered voting districts."

"I find the plaintiff, I find the lawyer, and then I put them together," Fisher said, "and then I worry about it for four years."

SEE ALSO: The Supreme Court Is Going To End Affirmative Action As We Know It

 

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