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NEWS of the Day - Oct 19, 2013
on some LACP issues of interest

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NEWS of the Day
on some issues of interest to the community policing and neighborhood activist across the country

EDITOR'S NOTE: The following group of articles from local newspapers and other sources constitutes but a small percentage of the information available to the community policing and neighborhood activist public. It is by no means meant to cover every possible issue of interest, nor is it meant to convey any particular point of view ...

We present this simply as a convenience to our readership ...

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US quietly releasing $1.6B in Pakistan assistance

by BRADLEY KLAPPER, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. has quietly decided to release more than $1.6 billion in military and economic aid to Pakistan that was suspended when relations between the two countries disintegrated over the covert raid that killed Osama bin Laden and deadly U.S. airstrikes against Pakistani soldiers.

Officials and congressional aides said ties have improved enough to allow the money to flow again.

American and NATO supply routes to Afghanistan are open. Controversial U.S. drone strikes are down. The U.S. and Pakistan recently announced the restart of their "strategic dialogue" after a long pause. Pakistan's new prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, is traveling to Washington for talks this coming week with President Barack Obama.

But in a summer dominated by foreign policy debates over the coup in Egypt and chemical weapons attacks in Syria, the U.S. hasn't promoted its revamped aid relationship with Pakistan. Neither has Pakistan.

The silence reflects the lingering mutual suspicions between the two.

The Pakistanis do not like being seen as dependent on their heavy-handed partners. The Americans are uncomfortable highlighting the billions provided to a government that is plagued by corruption and perceived as often duplicitous in fighting terrorism.

Congress has cleared most of the money, which should start moving early next year, officials and congressional aides said.

Over three weeks in July and August, the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development informed Congress that it planned to restart a wide range of assistance, mostly dedicated to helping Pakistan fight terrorism. The U.S. sees that effort sees as essential as it withdraws troops from neighboring Afghanistan next year and tries to leave a stable government behind.

Other funds focus on a range of items, including help for Pakistani law enforcement and a multibillion-dollar dam in disputed territory.

U.S.-Pakistani relations have weathered numerous crises in recent years. There was a months-long legal battle over a CIA contractor who killed two Pakistanis, in addition to the fallout from bin Laden's killing in the Pakistani military town of Abbottabad in May 2011. The Pakistani government was outraged that it received no advance warning of the Navy SEAL raid on bin Laden's compound.

Adding to the mistrust, the U.S. mistakenly killed two dozen Pakistani soldiers in November 2011. Islamabad responded by shutting land supply routes for troops in Afghanistan until it received a U.S. apology seven months later.

The State Department told Congress that the U.S. hadn't conducted any significant military financing for Pakistan since the "challenging and rapidly changing period of U.S.-Pakistan relations" in 2011 and 2012. The department stressed the importance now of enhancing Pakistan's anti-terrorism capabilities through better communications, night vision capabilities, maritime security and precision striking with F16 fighter jets.

The department told Congress on July 25 that it would spend $295 million to help Pakistan's military. Twelve days later it announced $386 million more. A pair of notifications arriving on Aug. 13 and worth $705 million centered on helping Pakistani troops and air forces operating in the militant hotbeds of western Pakistan, and other counterinsurgency efforts.

The administration had until the end of September to provide Congress with "reprogramming" plans at the risk of forfeiting some of the money, which spans federal budgets from 2009-2013.

State Department officials said the renewal of aid wasn't determined by any single event. But they noted a confluence of signs of greater cooperation, from Pakistan's improved commitment to stamping out explosives manufacturing to its recent counterterror offensive in areas bordering Afghanistan that have served as a primary sanctuary for the Taliban.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to talk publicly about the aid relationship ahead of Sharif's visit. They said the money would start reaching Pakistan in 2014 but take several years to disburse fully.

In its notifications to Congress, the department described fighting terrorism as a mutual concern but said little about the will of Pakistan's government, army and intelligence services to crack down on militant groups that often have operated with impunity in Pakistan while wreaking havoc on U.S. and international forces across the border in Afghanistan.

Top American officials have regularly questioned Pakistan's commitment to counterterrorism.

In 2011, Adm. Mike Mullen, then chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, described the militant Haqqani network as a "veritable arm" of Pakistani intelligence. Lawmakers and administration officials have cited Pakistani support for the Taliban, Lashkar-e-Taiba and other militant groups.

In September, the administration sent officials from multiple agencies for closed-doors briefings with the House and Senate foreign relations committees, officials and congressional aides said.

The House Foreign Affairs Committee has cleared all of the notifications. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee is reviewing a $280 million chunk of military financing, Senate aides said. Aides spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to talk publicly on the matter.

"The committee held up the projects to get more information and express concerns," said the office of Rep. Ed Royce, R-Calif., the House panel's chairman. "Though they went forward, the committee continues its close oversight."

While Washington has publicly challenged Islamabad to step up its fight against militant groups, Pakistan's biggest complaint has been the huge surge in drone strikes on terrorist targets, which Pakistanis see as violations of their sovereignty. The number of attacks has dropped dramatically this year.

The countries say they're now moving past the flaps and mishaps that soured their partnership in recent years. During an August trip to Pakistan, Secretary of State John Kerry announced the restart of a high-level "strategic dialogue" with Pakistan on fighting terrorism, controlling borders and fostering investment.

Among the economic aid programs included in the U.S. package, support for the Diamer-Basha dam near Pakistan's unresolved border with India has the potential for controversy and tremendous benefit.

Pakistan's government has been unable to secure money for the project from the World Bank, and the Asian Development Bank is waiting to hear from the United States and India before providing financing to help construction. The dam faces massive funding shortfalls.

In its July 24 notification to Congress, USAID said the project could cost up to $15 billion and take a decade to complete. The agency promised only to provide "financial and technical assistance" for studies, including on environmental and social aspects, while expressing hope the dam could be transformative for a country with chronic power shortages. State Department officials put the bill for the studies at $20 million.

If the dam were ultimately built, USAID wrote, it could provide electricity for 60 million people and 1 million acres of crop land, and provide a ready supply of water for millions more. It noted that Pakistani officials have sought American support at the "highest levels."

Despite amounting to just a small portion of the overall U.S. aid package, congressional aides said Pakistan's government has lobbied particularly hard for the dam money to be unlocked.

Pakistan's embassy in Washington refused to comment on the aid or say if Sharif would bring up any specific programs in talks at the White House.

http://www.greenwichtime.com/news/article/US-quietly-releasing-1-6B-in-Pakistan-assistance-4909285.php

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California

Gang members plead guilty to hate crime attack on Compton teen

LOS ANGELES >> Two Latino gang members displayed starkly different demeanors as they pleaded guilty Thursday to federal hate crime charges — the Southland's first convictions under the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act — stemming from a racially motivated New Year's Eve attack on a black teenager in Compton.

Jeffrey “Turkey” Aguilar and Efren “Looney” Marquez admitted their roles in the assault to U.S. District Judge Terry J. Hatter Jr., who departed from the usual script at the change-of-plea hearing by questioning the defendants in detail about their crimes and commenting on their body language.

Aguilar and Marquez were both charged with “aiding and abetting and causing an act to be done” under the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009. The law is named after Matthew Shepard, a gay college student tortured and killed in 1998, and James Byrd Jr., a black man who was chained to a pickup truck and dragged to his death the same year. The law makes it a federal hate crime to assault people based on race, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, gender and gender identity.

The diminutive Aguilar, who appeared meek and frightened, told Hatter he hit the 17-year-old victim on “his head” with a metal pipe.

“I assaulted him, sir,” Aguilar, 20, said in a barely audible mumble. Hatter told him to speak up.

After pleading guilty, he walked back to his seat, head lowered.

When it was his turn, 22-year-old Marquez pushed his chest out, cocked his head and strutted to the podium.

Noting the defendant's posture, Hatter commented that he had a South African friend who once observed that much could be discerned about a man by the way that he walks.

The judge told the tall, burly gang member that his co-defendant “didn't quite walk the way you did.”

Asked by Hatter to tell the court what his actions were last New Year's Eve, Marquez admitted threatening to shoot a second black juvenile and driving a getaway car containing Aguilar and another gang member who was not charged.

When asked why he threatened the boy, Marquez stammered that he was “mad at the situation,” adding that he “threatened, but I didn't have a weapon.”

The attack was part of a long-running campaign by the Compton Varrio 155 street gang to intimidate black residents and force them out of their Compton neighborhood, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.

Aguilar and Marquez admit in their plea agreements that “race and color were substantial motivating factors for the attack on M.L.”

Both defendants face up to 10 years in federal prison when they are sentenced Jan. 6 by Hatter, Assistant U.S. Attorney Reema El-Amamy said.

Police said that Aguilar and Marquez approached the victim — identified in court papers as M.L. — as he walked along a Compton street, identified themselves as members of the gang, and told the teen that he and his family were not allowed to live in the area because they are black.

Aguilar then hit the boy, who did not live in Compton and was merely visiting friends there, in the head with a pipe.

The gang members also referred to themselves as “NKs,” a racial term referring to someone who kills black people, prosecutors said.

The injured boy was chased to his girlfriend's house, where several other black teens were gathered; and Aguilar and Marquez yelled racial epithets at the group and demanded that they get out of the neighborhood, prosecutors said.

When the juveniles managed to run into the house, Aguilar and Marquez left but returned a short time later with about 15 to 20 other gang members who stormed the victims' homes, yelled racial slurs and warned them to get out of the neighborhood, according to prosecutors.

One of the gang members also threw a beer bottle through a window of one of the homes, police said.

Aguilar, Marquez and a teenage juvenile, who was not charged, were arrested last Jan. 24 in connection with the attack.

Media reports have documented a history of race-fueled violence in Compton apparently stemming from an influx of Latinos moving to the once predominantly black area.

http://www.dailynews.com/general-news/20131018/gang-members-plead-guilty-to-hate-crime-attack-on-compton-teen

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