Posts Tagged street

Key Senator Urges Obama To Push Foreclosure Relief In State Of The Union – Huffington Post

WASHINGTON — Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) is urging President Barack Obama to pledge a new round of foreclosure relief during his State of the Union address next week. In a letter to the president obtained by The Huffington Post, Merkley said the administration’s current anti-foreclosure programs have proven woefully inadequate, and pushed for a more thorough program to keep families in their homes.

“A record one million families lost their home to foreclosure last year,” Merkley wrote. “Next week, Mr. President, you will have the attention of the nation. I urge you to use this opportunity to renew efforts to tackle the national foreclosure crisis.”

Merkley’s call for presidential leadership on foreclosures comes as infighting among federal regulators appears to have stalled out key reforms to the bank divisions that work with troubled borrowers and process foreclosures.

The FDIC has been pushing to impose new requirements on the operations of those divisions, which are known as mortgage servicers. The agency has been engaged in heated negotiations with other regulators at the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). According to a source familiar with the negotiations, the Fed had initially opposed the plan, but agreed to support the rules after a few weeks of negotiations. The OCC, however, which is currently responsible for regulating the largest mortgage servicers — Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Citigroup — has resisted those rules. The OCC has never publicly sanctioned a mortgage servicer, despite widespread court findings of servicer fraud in the foreclosure process.

The Treasury Department, which had supported the new rules, had expected an agreement between agencies by Friday, Jan. 14, according to a spokesman. That anticipated agreement has not yet come to fruition.

But Treasury itself is engaged in a delicate dance on foreclosure policy — defending the foreclosure prevention program criticized by Merkley, even as it urges sweeping reform of the bank divisions that participate in that program.

“The goal of the [Home Affordable Modification Program] was to prevent three to four million foreclosures,” Merkley wrote, “but to date, fewer than 600,000 homowners have been approved.”

Merkley is a persistent advocate for financial reform, and co-authored a key provision of last year’s Wall Street overhaul legislation known as the Volcker Rule, which bars banks from speculating with taxpayer money.

At a Wednesday meeting of the Mortgage Bankers Association, Cindy Gertz, Treasury’s Director of Operations for HAMP, praised the servicers involved in the Treasury plan, noting that they had ramped up staffing in order to deal with the foreclosure flood. Treasury spokeswoman Andrea Risotto told HuffPost that Gertz’s praise for servicers was restricted to HAMP, and not to any other servicer activities. But servicer abuses within HAMP have been widely documented, with borrowers frequently making good on loan modification arrangements only to be foreclosed on.

Risotto noted that Treasury has a “compliance agent” that inspects servicers once a month to make sure banks are implementing the program correctly. Nevertheless, servicer employees have admitted to fraudulently robo-signing hundreds of foreclosure documents a day as a matter of ordinary procedure. Treasury has never sanctioned a servicer for violating HAMP rules, and maintains that it has no authority to do so, because the program is voluntary for banks.

But as Treasury defends servicers with one hand, it is also demanding fundamental reform of the servicer industry with the other. On Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner called for an overhaul of the way servicers are paid, arguing that the status quo is a “broken” system.

Regulatory agencies are debating whether to include standards for servicer conduct in new “skin-in-the-game” regulations for the mortgage bond market. The Wall Street overhaul legislation contains a provision requiring banks to retain at least five percent of the default risk whenever they sell mortgages off to investors. But there’s a key exception to the rule: for standardized, top-quality loans, banks will not have to retain any of the risk. The FDIC hopes that by including mortgage servicing rules in the definition of a standardized, top-quality mortgage, they can create a new gold standard for mortgage lending that is immune from current abuses.

But these new regulations would only reform the way that servicers operate with regard to new mortgages. They will not help the millions of borrowers already trapped in unaffordable loans, nor will they provide a way to manage the widening gyre of fraud allegations and other improprieties that pose massive potential losses at the nation’s too-big-to-fail banks.

In a speech Wednesday, FDIC Chair Sheila Bair warned, “Chaos in mortgage servicing and foreclosure is introducing a dangerous new uncertainty into this fragile market.” Bair suggested creating a foreclosure disaster fund akin to the BP oil spill fund that would compensate wronged homeowners and investors, while capping liabilities for big banks.

Merkley wants to find a solution that deals with homeowners already facing foreclosure (and bank fraud). He’s pushing for a six-point program to overhaul the current foreclosure system, including new standards for servicer conduct and new legal mechanisms to provide debt relief to deserving families.

Central to the program is a reform of the bankruptcy code, dubbed by Merkley as “lifeline bankruptcy reform.” Mortgages are currently excluded from the bankruptcy process, so even if borrowers declare bankruptcy — a process that is difficult to qualify for and comes with serious financial penalties — they cannot get debt relief on their mortgage. By making mortgages subject to renegotiation in bankruptcy under the supervision of a judge, Merkley hopes to establish a process that would allow borrowers to remain in their homes without simply granting a get-out-of-debt free card to everyone whose home value has declined since the collapse of the housing bubble.

“This makes much more sense than paying for modifications,” economist Dean Baker, co-Director of the Center for Economic Policy and Research, told HuffPost. Under HAMP, the Treasury pays servicers $1,000 to implement each loan modification, plus an additional $1,000 for every year that borrowers keep paying on the modified loan.

A similar program for farm loans was adopted during the mid-1980s and helped thousands of family farms avoid foreclosure, and a recent IMF report suggested bankruptcy reform as an effective solution to the U.S. mortgage mess. The same report found that the high rate of foreclosure may be responsible for between 1 percent and 1.25 percent of the U.S. unemployment rate, currently at 9.4 percent.

Mortgage bankruptcy reform was endorsed by then-Sen. Barack Obama during his presidential campaign, but died in the Senate in Spring 2009 amid weak backing from President Obama. Senate Republicans, who pushed for bankruptcy to be the appropriate way to deal with faltering megabanks, did not believe that consumers should receive the same treatment. Several bank-friendly Democrats also opposed the bankruptcy overhaul, prompting Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) to fume that banks “frankly own the place,” referring to Congress.

Merkley also calls for an end to the “dual-track” system, in which mortgage servicers begin the foreclosure process even as they negotiate loan modifications with troubled borrowers. The system allows banks to foreclose as quickly as possible if the modification falls through, but also leads to many unnecessary foreclosures as banks improperly continue with foreclosures on successful modifications. Merkley would also require servicers to establish a single individual to contact borrowers, preventing paperwork mix-ups and other bank confusion which lead to improper foreclosures, and establish an independent party to review whether banks have followed the rules on foreclosures.

OCC policy already bans the dual-track system unless the process is required by mortgage bond agreements, but the OCC is yet to enforce that ban with any sanction against banks that violate it.

The potential impact of other elements in Merkley’s plan is less clear. He would implement a “short-refinance” plan, which would allow homeowners who owe more on their loan than their house is worth to refinance into a new loan at the current value of their home. Government agencies would then pay the existing bank to expunge the remaining debt levels. But Baker was skeptical that such a program would be workable. With home prices down dramatically nationwide from their bubble-level peaks, even outright housing speculators will be sure to seek relief, triggering a government payout to the very banks who caused the problem by lending recklessly in the midst of a bubble. “There is not going to be any plausible means test that you can put in place that will prevent almost anyone in this situation from taking advantage of the opportunity,” Baker said.

Merkley would also provide a $5,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers in an effort to boost home sales. But Baker said such an arrangement is unlikely to be an efficient mechanism to lift the struggling housing market.

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Palin Criticizes Manufacturers of ‘Blood Libel’ as Proponents of Speech Limits … – Fox News

Sarah Palin made a call to conscience Wednesday for those who would manufacture “a blood libel” for last weekend’s Arizona shooting, saying “acts of monstrous brutality … begin and end with the criminals who commit them, not collectively” with Americans exercising their constitutional freedoms.

The former Republican vice-presidential candidate, the target of many pontificators ascribing motive to gunman Jared Lee Loughner, charged in the Tucson attack that killed six and injured 14 others, had been silent since shortly after the Saturday shooting when she issued a two-line statement offering her prayers for the families and victims.

But Palin’s name — and those of others, including Republican Senate candidate Sharron Angle — had been central in the early accusations over what spurred the shooting. Liberal media pundits assigned blame by citing Palin’s political action committee’s website, which showed crosshairs on districts that it was targeting in the November midterm, including the district of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, the believed target of the gunman who was wounded in the shooting.

Others said Angle’s comments on the campaign trail also incited violence. The debate about heated political rhetoric ratcheted up so quickly and vigorously — even before Loughner had been identified as the alleged shooter — some Democratic lawmakers called for curbs on free speech.

In a Facebook posting issued Wednesday morning, Palin lamented the “irresponsible statements” of those casting blame on political figures.

“If you don’t like a person’s vision for the country, you’re free to debate that vision. If you don’t like their ideas, you’re free to propose better ideas. But, especially within hours of a tragedy unfolding, journalists and pundits should not manufacture a blood libel that serves only to incite the very hatred and violence they purport to condemn. That is reprehensible,” Palin said, referring to the Medieval term used to try to demonize Jews by accusing them of murdering Christians to use their blood in ritual.

She added that claims that the political rhetoric is somehow more heated today than ever before seem unfounded, noting that “back in those ‘calm days’” of the Republic, political differences were occasionally settled with “dueling pistols.”

Palin was immediately criticized for the statements.

“You know, Sarah Palin just can’t seem to get it, on any front. I think she’s an attractive person, she is articulate,” Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., reportedly told the Bill Press radio show. “But I think intellectually, she seems not to be able to understand what’s going on here.”

As Palin decried the exploitation of the Arizona shooting, some lawmakers said federal regulations are needed to stop heated speech.

Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y., on Monday referenced a comment by Angle in calling for a change in the nation’s political dialogue — by will or by law.

“‘Don’t retreat, reload.’ Someone in Nevada saying we may need to use Second Amendment remedies. There’s only one way to read this,” Slaughter said.

Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Calif., told Fox News that Angle “talked about people rising up and taking over the government by force, using their guns. She was very explicit.”

Sherman said that even if language used by Angle and her supporters hadn’t incited the shootings in Arizona, eventually it will lead to violence.

“I’m saying if you have a heart attack, stop smoking, not because nicotine may or may not have caused your last heart attack, you’ll never know, but it’s going to cause the next one,” Sherman said. “And if we continue to bring into the mainstream and treat as civil those who call for violence and disruption and assassination and revolution and insurrection, then whether that caused what happened in Tucson or not, it will cause the next tragedy.”

Angle defended herself in a statement released late Tuesday.

“Expanding the context of the attack to blame and to infringe upon the people’s constitutional liberties is both dangerous and ignorant. The irresponsible assignment of blame to me, Sarah Palin or the Tea Party movement by commentators and elected officials puts all who gather to redress grievances in danger,” Angle said.

“Finger-pointing toward political figures is an audience-rating game and contradicts the facts as they are known,” Angle added. “I have consistently called for reasonable political dialogue on policy issues to encourage civil political education and debate. Inappropriately attributing blame of a singular tragedy to achieve a political agenda is contrary to civil discourse, and is a media ploy to which I refuse to belong.”

In the wake of the shooting, the National Hispanic Media Coalition used the incident to reiterate its call for the FCC to update its definitions of hate speech in media. It also asked the FCC to “examine the extent and effects of hate speech in media, and non-regulatory options for counteracting the violence that extreme rhetoric breeds.”

Rep. Robert Brady, D-Pa., said he has no knowledge about what motivated Loughner to attack Giffords and the others, but he still wants legislation that bans the use of certain imagery when talking about congressional targets.

“I want to eliminate what may have been,” Brady told Fox News. “I’m not a psychologist … All I’m saying is you can’t put a bull’s eye or a crosshair on a member of Congress.”

And on Tuesday, Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Ore., was quoted in the Oregon Statesman-Journal saying he blamed conservative media personalities like Fox News’ Glenn Beck and radio host Rush Limbaugh.

“I hold them personally responsible. I don’t know how they can sleep at night after this,” Schrader said.

Loughner, the accused gunman with no discernible connection to American political discourse, has not stated why he allegedly shot 20 people in the assault at a Tucson Safeway grocery store. The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday that the community college student who had been suspended last October had frequented gaming websites seeking answers to questions about why he couldn’t find a job or get a girlfriend.

More than a decade ago, lawmakers like Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., warned that violence in movies and video games could cause violence in life. But graphic imagery and heated rhetoric moved to the political theater long before that. 

Several recent examples have been offered from both sides of the aisle, including President Obama’s quoting from the film “The Untouchables” in which appears the statement, “If they bring a knife, we’ll bring a gun.”

And even before movie references, crosshairs and bull’s eyes, “battlefields” were drawn across campaign and policy landscapes. President Lyndon Johnson’s State of the Union speech called for a figurative “War on Poverty,” a precursor to the Reagan administration’s equally figurative “War on Drugs.”

Slaughter said that while she’s not up to speed on current regulations, the Federal Communications Commission should work to sanction broadcasts that could incite people to violence.

“No one owns the airwaves,” Slaughter said. “They are owned by the people.”

If lawmakers were to seek remedies to quiet distasteful discussion, the so-called Fairness Doctrine is at the top of lists inspiring supporters and alarming opponents.

Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., told National Public Radio said he “came up in a time that the Fairness Doctrine did not allow media outlets to say things about a candidate or a person in public office without giving that person equal time to respond. And I really believe that everybody needs to take a look at where we are pushing things, and may need to take a serious step back and evaluate what’s going on here.”

Brent Bozell, president of the Media Research Center, said any effort to “use the Arizona tragedy as an excuse to criminalize conservative thought through the FCC” will “backfire magnificently.”

“The country is learning that a) there was no conservative ‘hate’ speech that inspired this killer, and b) that this monster wasn’t even a conservative! In the face of those realities, any attempt to tar Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Sarah Palin, the Tea Party, or any other conservative leader as responsible in any way will be met with outrage by the American people. If they bring a knife, we’ll bring a gun — as they say,” Bozell said.

And not every politician may be on board with a hasty turn to bottling up dissenting voices. Delivering a speech Tuesday, Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said media have the power to inspire, motivate and inform. “But they also have the power to inflame and incite. The seething rhetoric has gone too far.”

However, Leahy added, “In a free society, the society that we Americans must always want our country to be, the government should not and must not restrain free expression.”

Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., also suggested Tuesday in a speech at the Center for American Progress that the blame game has no winner.

“The big question wasn’t whose rhetoric was right or wrong, but whether our political conversation was worthy of the confidence and trust of the American people,” he said.

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Obama Picks William Daley For Chief Of Staff Post – NPR

William Daley, President Obama's pick for White House chief of staff, speaks Thursday while the president looks on. The pick brings a renowned powerbroker on the wavelength of Wall Street into Obama's retooled administration.Enlarge Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images

William Daley, President Obama’s choice for White House chief of staff, speaks Thursday while the president looks on. The pick brings a renowned power broker on the wavelength of Wall Street into Obama’s retooled administration.

Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images

William Daley, President Obama’s choice for White House chief of staff, speaks Thursday while the president looks on. The pick brings a renowned power broker on the wavelength of Wall Street into Obama’s retooled administration.

President Obama on Thursday appointed William M. Daley — a former Clinton administration official and part of the famed Chicago political family — as his new chief of staff, calling him an “experienced public servant.”

Daley, a sometimes ally, sometimes critic of the president, will step into what is traditionally the most influential advisory job in the White House — acting as the president’s day-to-day sounding board, gatekeeper and scheduler.

Daley “possesses a deep understanding of how jobs are created and how to grow our economy,” Obama said at the White House. “Few Americans can boast the breadth of experience that Bill Daley brings to this job.”

Stepping down from the post is Pete Rouse, who has held the job on an interim basis since Rahm Emanuel resigned three months ago as chief of staff to run for mayor of Chicago.

Rouse, who did not want the job permanently and recommended Daley as his replacement, will remain as a counselor to the president, an elevated position from his former job as senior adviser. Daley is expected to start in the next couple of weeks.

Daley is the youngest of the late Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley’s seven children. He is credited with helping his older brother Richard win their father’s old office and hold on to it for the past 22 years.

On the national stage, William Daley helped craft successful campaigns to elect President Clinton and was named commerce secretary under Clinton in 1997.

At the White House announcement on Thursday, Daley thanked the president, praising him for his “proven leadership.”

Daley, who is currently Midwest chairman of JPMorgan Chase & Co., said in an interview with The New York Times last year that the administration had “miscalculated” on health care and moved too far to the left. He has strong centrist credentials and joins the White House just as it finds itself in need of making more bipartisan compromises to get things done.

Word of Daley’s appointment brought praise from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which has frequently been at odds with the administration.

“This is a strong appointment. Bill Daley is a man of stature and extraordinary experience in government, business, trade negotiations, and global affairs. He’s an accomplished manager and strong leader. We look forward to working with him to accelerate our recovery, grow the economy, create jobs, and tackle America’s global challenges,” Chamber of Commerce President Thomas J. Donohue said in a statement.

The new job will thrust Daley, 62, into the heart of national politics just as Obama adapts to a new reality in Washington. Republicans now control the House and are working to gut his signature health care law, as well as pushing for major cuts in spending.

For Obama, the move comes amid other major shifts in White House staffing — among them the impending departure of White House press secretary Robert Gibbs, who said on Wednesday he would step down by early February. Senior adviser David Axelrod will also be leaving soon, and both of Obama’s deputy chiefs of staff, Jim Messina and Mona Sutphen, are exiting soon. David Plouffe, a key member of Obama’s inner circle as his former presidential campaign manager, will be joining the senior staff of the White House on Monday.

But the chief of staff position is considered the most consuming job in the White House, helping shape nearly everything that the president deals with — how he spends his time, how he pursues his strategies on foreign and domestic policy, how he deals with Congress and the public.

When Obama launched his presidential campaign, the Daley family put aside its deep connections to Bill and Hillary Clinton and endorsed the young Illinois senator. Until then, Obama and the Daleys had operated in mostly separate spheres of Illinois politics. After Obama’s victory, Daley helped oversee the presidential transition.

Daley laid out his political ideology last year upon joining the board of Third Way, a moderate Democratic think tank.

“We must acknowledge that the left’s agenda has not won the support of a majority of Americans — and, based on that recognition, we must steer a more moderate course,” he said at the time.

NPR’s David Schaper and Mara Liasson contributed to this report, which also contains material from The Associated Press

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The mystery of Bill Daley – Washington Post (blog)

Posted at 10:57 AM ET, 01/ 6/2011

By Ezra Klein

Thumbnail image for daleyonmtp.JPG

Imagine I told you that one of the candidates President Obama is considering for chief of staff opposed the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, opposed doing health-care reform and led the Chamber of Commerce’s effort to loosen the post-Enron regulations on the accounting and auditing professions. His major qualification for the job is that he’s extremely well liked by the business community, in part because he routinely advocates for their interests and in part because he’s a top executive at J.P. Morgan. His theory of politics is that the Democratic Party has become too liberal and needs to tack right. Last year, he doubled down on that argument by joining the board of Third Way.

Now imagine I told you that one of the candidates President Obama is considering for chief of staff has been endorsed by Howard Dean as a “huge plus” for the Obama administration and previously chaired Al Gore’s 2000 presidential campaign. Dean, of course, was the great liberal hope in 2004, and has been a key voice for progressives ever since. Gore’s 2000 campaign was a notably populist effort, in tone if not in content.

Now imagine I told you they were the same guy.

This is the mystery of William Daley. Reports suggest that he’ll be named Obama’s chief of staff fairly soon, perhaps as early as tomorrow. But how is it that a centrist banker who opposed the Obama administration’s signature initiatives has such a large constituency among liberal political types both inside and outside the White House?

Daley certainly has his backers. The Obama administration, home to many liberals, clearly likes him. So does Howard Dean, and so did Al Gore. He’s apparently quite popular among business leaders, as well. His performance shepherding NAFTA through the Congress certainly sounds like it was an impressive political feat, whatever you think of the underlying legislation.

Perhaps Daley is simply an obscenely good executive vice president type: He seems to have impressed everyone who could one day promote him, alienated virtually no one (or at least no one who has come forward publicly) and effectively advocated for the interests of whoever happened to be paying him at the time.

Or maybe the answer is that the Obama administration has simply decided to tack right, and they figure the way to do that is to hire someone who legitimately believes that tacking right is a good idea. I don’t find Daley’s theory of politics persuasive, but if you wanted to get credit in the media for moving to the right, it’d help to hire someone who had publicly and clearly attacked your moves to the left.

But the evidence here really doesn’t add up. Dean wanted more a vastly more progressive administration, but he likes the guy who wanted a vastly less progressive administration. The administration likes its own record but appears interested in hiring someone who doesn’t. There’s a widespread perception that the White House is too close to Wall Street, but the leading candidate for chief of staff is a top executive at J.P. Morgan. Oh, and he was on the board of Fannie Mae, too.

The Daley pick seems like a bad idea to me. The particular theory of politics he espouses seems woefully detached from the realities of the modern partisan environment — as Jon Chait says, it effectively means “allowing extreme positions to redefine the parameters of the debate.” But you can certainly read this post as evidence that Daley is a singular political talent, and the Obama administration would be well served by hiring someone able to sustain these sorts of contradictions.

If anyone has seen very persuasive arguments for or against Daley elsewhere, link them in the comments. I’m particularly interested in testimonials from people who’ve worked with or against him.

Photo credit: “Meet the Press.”

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By Ezra Klein  | January 6, 2011; 10:57 AM ET Categories:  Obama administration   Save & Share:  Send E-mail   Facebook   Twitter   Digg   Yahoo Buzz   Del.icio.us   StumbleUpon   Technorati   Google Buzz   Previous: Will symbolism be enough for the tea parties?Next: Repealing health-care reform would cost $230 billion over 10 years — and more after that

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Mark Madoff, son of Bernie Madoff, had it all before dad’s billion-dollar … – New York Daily News

Stephanie Mikesell Madoff, Mark's wife, with their son Nicholas.

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Stephanie Mikesell Madoff, Mark’s wife, with their son Nicholas.

Mark Madoff, the handsome prince of Bernie Madoff‘s ill-gotten kingdom, lived the sweet life before his father’s $65 billion scam imploded.

During one three-month period in 2008, he racked up more than $77,000 chartering private jets to hopscotch around the country.

He vacationed at his $6.5 million, 3.3 acre retreat in Nantucket and a stately farmhouse in tony Greenwich, Conn. The seasoned fly fishermen also frequently planned outdoor excursions.

“Mark loved his lifestyle, loved the fact he could fly on a private jet or walk into Dunhill and spend $200 on an umbrella,” a trader told Vanity Fair in 2009.

His family life seemed just as enviable.

The 46-year-old had been happily married since 2003 to his second wife, Stephanie, a stunning blonde who was a rising star in the fashion industry. The couple had two young children and raised them in an exclusive SoHo building that rocker Jon Bon Jovi also called home.

Mark Madoff seemingly had it all before his dad’s scam was exposed. Handout

At the Madoff firm, where he was an executive known for his charming salesmanship, Mark Madoff loved working closely with his younger brother, Andrew, and his father.

“What makes it fun for all of us is to walk into the office in the morning and see the rest of your family sitting there. That’s a good feeling to have,” Mark Madoff said in an interview in 2000 with Wall Street & Technology.

Left to right: Bernie Madoff, with brother, Peter and sons Andrew and Mark in 1995. GI/BM/Getty

But the high life vanished exactly two years ago Saturday, when he and his brother turned their father in to the feds.

After his dad’s arrest, Mark Madoff and his family became pariahs, and many victims believed he was complicit in the Ponzi scheme.

He and his family suffered death threats. A fusillade of lawsuits – including a $200 million claim by Bernie Madoff’s bankruptcy trustee – has also restricted his spending and movement of finances.

Mark Madoff at work at his father’s company in 2005. GI/BM/Getty

The Madoff stigma became so bad that even his wife turned her back on his family’s name. Last February, she petitioned a Manhattan judge to change her last name to Morgan.

Friends said Mark Madoff buckled under the infamy, withdrawing socially, obsessing over news accounts and fearing the possibility he would be criminally charged one day.

The stress exacerbated a chronic stomach-pain condition and frayed his marriage, according to reports.

Mark Madoff’s good life came to an end with his apparent suicide. Smith for News

On Oct. 15, 2009, NYPD cops searched for Mark Madoff after his wife frantically called to say he went missing and feared for his safety. The couple had argued earlier in the evening, prompting her husband  – who apparently suffered from depression – to take off on his Vespa.

The next morning he returned home, telling cops he had spent the night at a hotel and that he would seek help from his doctor at Weill Cornell Medical Center.

But people who knew Mark Madoff said his father’s disgrace continued to engulf him, leading to his suicide on Saturday.

Bernie Madoff, right, with wife, Ruth, and son Mark. GI/BM/Getty

“The pressure was mounting. The Picard suit, the anniversary. He’s been upset for two years,” a source said. “He’s been trying to move on with his life but he wasn’t successful.”

jfanelli@nydailynews.com

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Miley Cyrus Isn’t Breaking The Law In Bong Video, Experts Say – MTV.com

By now, you’ve probably seen the video of Miley Cyrus allegedly smoking salvia from a bong, and you’re probably wondering whether she might face legal repercussions as a result of the clip. According to organizations on either side of the ongoing war over drug legalization, the answer is no.

“[The video] might be embarrassing to her, but it does not put her in any legal risk,” Keith Stroup, legal counsel at the marijuana advocacy group NORML, told MTV News on Friday (December 10). “At the moment, [salvia] is not illegal in California, so even if she walked out on the street and smoked it in front of police, she couldn’t be arrested. And the video of her smoking isn’t enough to get her in trouble, because there’s no proof she wasn’t smoking tobacco.”

“Salvia is a drug of concern,” said Michael Sanders, a spokesperson for the Drug Enforcement Agency. “We are taking steps to look further into it, but for right now, it is not a schedule-one narcotic.”

Under the Controlled Substance Act, U.S. drug policy assigns narcotics into five different “schedules” — marijuana is a schedule-one drug, as it has “a high potential for abuse … [and] no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States,” cocaine is a schedule two, etc. — which are determined by two federal agencies: the DEA and the Food and Drug Administration. The DEA does not currently list salvia, an herb that, when smoked, provides a powerful psychoactive punch, though several states have made it illegal. In California, where the Cyrus video was allegedly shot, it is illegal to provide salvia to minors; however, it is legal for them to possess it.

Since the Cyrus video was not only allegedly shot in California but was also done so five days after her 18th birthday (according to TMZ), the pop star wasn’t breaking any laws. Though, as Stroup put it, all of that may change soon.

“Until recently, [salvia] was perfectly legal, frankly because no one paid attention to it. It’s only after a little attention was paid to it in the media that states begin passing legislation about it,” he said. “Drug policy in this country is, by a large part, based on a social response or a political response, but the bottom line is, they don’t want people getting high.”

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Ford F-150 SVT Raptor Supercab Snags Award; New Supercrew Headed To Dealers … – Autochannel (press release)

F-150 SVT Raptor raised the bar for high-speed off-road performance trucks by adding a SuperCrew option and more standard power and towing capability for 2011. More than 2,700 orders have been placed for Raptor with the SuperCrew option

SEE ALSO: Ford Buyers Guide

LOS ANGELES – December 9, 2010: The 2010 Ford F-150 SVT Raptor has been awarded Pickup Truck of the Year by Four Wheeler magazine. This is the 10th award for the off-road performance truck that has been a huge hit since its debut last year.

“Ford’s Special Vehicle Team is immensely proud of this coveted award and is excited to bring the 2011 F-150 Raptor SuperCrew to market,” said Jost Capito, director of Global Performance Vehicles and Motorsports Business Development.

Vehicles were judged during a rigorous weeklong 1,000-mile competition in Southern California. Testing included environments such as mountain trails, desert sand dunes, stream crossings and Interstates. Terrain varied in elevation from sea level to mountains in excess of 8,000 feet.

“Raptor is every four-wheel-drive enthusiast’s dream of what a factory pickup truck should be,” said Douglas McColloch, Four Wheeler editor. “Straight off the showroom floor, Raptor comes equipped with all manner of premium performance parts that are designed for extreme off-pavement forays – be it rock crawling, mud bogging or desert racing. The Raptor undertakes these tasks without compromising the F-150 platform’s class-leading ride and handling characteristics on pavement. It inspires confidence in the dirt and delivers serenity on the street.

Click PLAY to watch video of the F-150 SVT Raptor

“All told,” McColloch added, “the Raptor 6.2 is a joy to drive, and a very deserving winner of our Pickup Truck of the Year competition.”

Since Raptor’s debut, customers have been asking for a SuperCrew version. They wanted even more utility added to its already impressive performance credentials. For 2011, Ford has answered the call with the introduction of the 2011 F-150 SVT Raptor SuperCrew. Customers have responded, with more than 2,700 orders placed for Raptor with the SuperCrew option.

More capability, more technologyFor 2011, the 6.2-liter V8 producing 411 horsepower and 434 lb.-ft. of torque comes standard. A larger 36-gallon fuel tank and increased towing capability – rated at 8,000 pounds – keep F-150 SVT Raptor SuperCrew a mainstay in the desert environment, with capabilities as a chase or tow truck. Upgraded content also includes a standard 4.2-inch LCD productivity screen and SelectShift Automatic™ transmission.

Raptor’s exterior also receives some new touches for 2011, in the form of an additional paint color – Ingot Silver Metallic. A new optional hood graphic adds a personalized and functional touch to F-150 SVT Raptor. Inspired by older off-road racing Ford Broncos, matte black accent graphics run along the hood.

The F-150 SVT Raptor was designed as a purpose-built, high-speed off-road truck ready for adventure, and it’s also versatile enough to handle the daily commute. Key enablers to the Raptor’s impressive performance are functional design cues and impressive suspension technology. Internal triple bypass shocks by FOX Racing Shox – the first on a production truck – provide position-sensitive damping and extra suspension travel for extreme off-roading and a smooth ride on the road.

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