| Wednesday, July 13, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Barack betrays  another promise (this time on Iraqi refugees), Nouri continues his war on  peaceful protesters, extending the US military presence in Iraq continues to be  pushed, and more.     Mahdi Nazemroaya:  In regards to France, I have to point out that  the Defense Minister of France made a statement which didn't please the United  States.  He said, we're willing to -- essentially, this is what he said -- we're  willing to stop if there's political discussion and if Muammar Gaddafi  switches his place in the government. It's not a total withdrawal, they're  basically saying something symbolic. NATO's running out of steam here, the  assessment is that they have 90 days to end this war, Ramadan which is a Muslim  holy day is coming up, in September, I believe. [August 1st through 29th is  Ramadan this year.]  They have to end this war by that time. So they're looking  for an exit strategy.  This is what all this talk about negotiations is about  because if anybody who follows the news and the news wires will see that the  Libyan regime, Muammar Gaddafi and his government have been asking for  negotiations from the beginning.  The African Union has. Venezuela offered to be  a negotiator between both sides or a go-between.  Everybody has.  The Chinese,  the Russians have called for negotiations.  The people that prevented it were  the Obama administration, Mr. Sarkozy in Paris, Prime Minister Cameron in  London and NATO.  They're the ones who pushed it.  And I have to point something  out, the Italian prime minister said something very important about a meeting  with David Cameron and Mr. Sarkozy.  The president of France and the prime  minister of Britain both said that the campaign should not end until there is a  revolt in Tripoli against Col Gaddafi and his regime.  What this signifies is  that the intentions of these bombings was to create a revolt.  The bombings did  not start because there was a revolt, the intention was to create a revolt from  the bombings, to make the people get fed up with Gaddafi and to overthrow him to  end the bombings. That is what the intention was.  That is why there's a siege  on Tripoli and Libya. That's why they're bombing civilian sites.  And I want to  clarify, they bombed food storage places, medical clinics, hospitals, a place  for children, a place for Down Syndrome, civilian residential areas, university  campuses.  These are the types of places they bombed.  This was punishment on  the Libyan people.  And it backfired because it made Gaddafi very, very popular  in Libya and across in Africa.   Kevin Pina:  And you're listening to Flashpoints on Pacifica  Radio and that is the voice of Mahdi Nazemroaya our special  correspondent coming to us direct from Tripoli, in Libya. We're discussing the  situation on the ground there.  Mahdi, I also understand there were some recent  bombings again happening over Tripoli.  What has, in the last two weeks that  you've been there, can you just summarize what has been the overall impact of  the NATO bombing campaign on the ground in the capitol of Libya?   Mahdi Nazemroaya: Well Kevin, there's been so many bombings and  overhead flights by NATO war planes that I've lost track.  That's the honest  truth.  They have been flying overhead and bombing.  I hear bombings when I'm in  the shower, I hear bombings when I'm outside. I hear their planes.  It's hard to  keep track.  It's on the news, the Libyan TV talks about it. The [foreign]  journalists here don't really cover it because it's not an issue for them.   They're more concerned about making the Libyan government look bad. So they've  bombed and this bombing has backfired.  Instead of getting the population  against the government, it's brought everybody together. It's unified the  country. There's a new spirit.  There's an actual call for global revolution  again in Libya.  Libya, for a long time the Libyans saw themselves as the center  for global revolution.  That's actually in the youth again. So when I talk to  people in the street -- and I mean regular Libyans and Libyan society as a whole  -- the youth, the elderly, children, people who have nothing to do with  officialdom or the Libyan state -- they are in a state of high morale, they are  totally against NATO and many of them now support Col Gaddafi -- even the ones  who were his political opponents and disliked the man and his family and his son  Saif al-Islam now support the man. This has brought the country together and  this has backfired on NATO.  This has totally backfired on them and it was a  very big strategic mistake.  The thing is that they thought this would be done  in a matter of days, maybe in two weeks, something like that.  But it wasn't.   It wasn't a walk in the park for them at all.    Kevin Pina: And you're listening to Flashpoints on Pacifica  Radio and that is the voice of Mahdi  Nazemroaya coming to us direct from Tripoli in Libya. And, Mahdi, we also hear  reports that the rebels over the last week have taken several strategic towns  and are making a drive towards the capitol of Tripoli and according to a lot of  the western reports that we're hearing, their morale is equally high.  So in a  lot of ways, these two reports, one that we're hearing in Tripoli and the other  that we're hearing from journalists embedded with the so-called rebels, are very  inconsistent.  How do we make sense of this inconsistency?     Mahdi Nazemroaya: Well let me say that I know some of these  journalists and I knew some of these journalists before they left Tripoli, such  as the ones in Misrata.  I will point out that I personally -- on a personal  basis -- question their professionalism, I question their intent in this  country, alright?  That's from my personal experience with them.  In regards to  towns falling like Sabha which they claim fell and its environs they took all  the journalists who were willing to go to that city in Fezzan, I want to visit  that city as well, it's in the south.  They said it fell.  It didn't.  They said  the gates of Tripoli had been reached. They hadn't. They've said that  neighborhoods have fallen, they haven't. They've said that mosques have been  closed, they haven't.  I read those reports saying mosques have been closed and  there's fighting every night.  There isn't fighting every night.  There is  some fighting.  That's true.  At Tripoli, sometimes there's one or two people  firing out of God knows where but that's only to destabilize this place and it's  part of the psychological operation against this country.  And I will let you  know that there are special forces on the ground in Tripoli and they're here for  sabotage and to break the morale here.  They want regime change. And I'll tell  you, NATO is not going to win this war. This war is unwinnable. And if they  invade this country, they're fools.          Last week, thug and First Lady of Iraq Moqtada al-Sadr was explaining who  was to be socially welcomed and who was to be socially shunned.  AFP reported  that collaborators with the  US would be shunned.  AFP  (and Moqtada) did not note that the US  Embassy in Baghdad hopes to pull in the local population as contractors in 2012  and 2013.  That would be more difficult if they're threatened and the man who  issues fatawas loves to threaten.  AFP  reported, "Asked about whether  Iraqis who had worked with the Americans as drivers, cleaners, builders or in  other menial jobs could work with a government led by his movement, the cleric  replied: 'yes they can, but not in administrative work,' suggesting they would  not rise above low-ranking positions."  Current workers are to be shunned and  translators are social pariah according to Moqtada.    In today's New York Times, Tim Arango reports  that  it is these groups Moqtada has labeled undesirables -- "especially interpreters  for the military" -- who are now suffering in the asylum process as they attempt  to be granted admission to the United States. Arango notes, "Advocates say that  the administration is ignoring a directive from Congress to draft a contingency  plan to expedite visas should those Iraqis who worked for the United States  government" and he notes that from October 2010 (start of the fiscal year)  through last June, less "than 7,000 Iraqis have been admitted to the United  States."  If this trickle continues, Barack will be admitting less than George  W. Bush was in his final year occupying the Oval Office. Ed O'Keefe (Washington Post) adds , "A  special program meant to distribute 25,000 visas to Iraqis who worked for the  U.S. government has admitted just 7,000 since it started in 2008, officials said  this week.  In addition, the U.S. Refugee Admission Program, a global program  that also admits Iraqis, will admit about 6,000 Iraqis this year, down from  18,000 in fiscal 2010."        Dr. Farrah Mateen:  So the United Nations High Commissioner of  Refugees recognizes more than 40 million refugees in the world today and there  are currently more than 30 active, armed conflicts and we know very little about  neurological disease in humanitarian emergencies and in times of humanitarian  crisis.  The war in Iraq actually began more than eight years ago now, March 20,  2003.  And the UNHCR recognizes more than 3.5 million persons of concern of  Iraqi origin and currently there are more than 2 million refugees who live  outside of Iraq.  The United States  as well as western Europe, Australia and  Canada  are major recipients of Iraqi refugees today and continue to be.  Iraqi  refugees often have to seek humanitarian assistance in the countries where they  flee to.      Neither Arango nor O'Keefe's article indicate that they attempted to get an  answer on what's going on from the person in charge of the US Iraqi refugee  program.  Candidate Barack Obama swore that if elected president he would  provide $2 billion for Iraqi refugees.  That has still not happened.  What's  going on?  O'Keefe notes State Dept employees spoken to.  But the State Dept  isn't over this.  This doesn't fall under Hillary Clinton's scope.  You'd think  it would because she is Secretary of State; however, Barack put the War Monger  Samantha Power in charge of many things Iraq including Iraqi refugees.  This was  made clear by plus-size model and then-White House spokesperson Robert Gibbs on  August 14, 2009 when he issued a statement which included:     Further to discussions that took place during Prime Minister  Maliki's recent meetings in Washington, President Obama is pleased to announce  that Samantha Power, Senior Director for Multilateral Affairs and Human Rights  at the National Security Council in the White House, will coordinate the efforts  of the many parts of the U.S. government on Iraqi refugees and internally  displaced persons (IDPs), including the Department of State, U.S. Agency for  International Development, Department of Homeland Security, and Department of  Defense.   So what happened?  Samantha Power was too busy spreading lies about Libya?   It was Power who came up with the lie that Libyan women were being raped -- by  assailants on goverment provided viagra!!!!! -- and it was her cohort Susan Rice  that was tasked with popularizing that lie. When The Problem From Hell 's actions demonstrate  that the self-described "humanitarian  hawk" isn't at all concerned with  humanity, you're just left with a power-mad buttinsky craving the blood of  others.  No, that doesn't sound like someone who should have been tasked with  the Iraqi refugee issue.    
   Turning to another member of the administration, US Secretary of Defense  Leon Panetta's visit to Iraq this week has not yet resulted in more press  covergae than former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates' Never-Ending Farewell  Tour but give it time. On the trip, he stated that the US military  would defend itself against Iran whom Panetta alleges is supplying weapons to  Iraqi militias  and that it would defend itself against Iraqi militias  such as Moqtada al-Sadr's militias.Al  Mada reports  that Nouri al-Maliki's spokesperson Ali  al-Dabbagh stated that the US military would not do military operations against  al-Sadr. (It's not in the article but I'm told on the phone that al-Dabbagh also  declared yesterday that the Panetta is mistaken and no military action against  Iran will take place using Iraq as a staging platform as a result of the  existing outlines in the SOFA and the Strategic Framework Agreement.)  Meanwhile  the editorial board of New Hampshire's Sentinel  Source observes :  Today, there are still 46,000 U.S. troops in Iraq, some dying in  supposedly non-combat roles. And the White House has begun to indicate that it  will keep as many as 10,000 there past the end-of-the-year deadline -- if the  Iraqi government asks for them to stay.  Press reports quote unidentified  briefers and foreign diplomats as saying that plans for retaining the troops  indefinitely are already under way.  The administration's intention is clear in the open invitation it  is waiving in the face of Prime Minister Nouri Maliki, hoping for a come-hither  gesture. 
 18 US soldiers have died in the last six weeks.  Michael Evans (Times of London via The  Australian) notes  that fact and points out, "US President Barack Obama's  'final withdrawal' deadline was supposed to be the day when he could tell the  American people the war in Iraq was finally over -- not 'mission accoplished' as  his predecessor declared prematurely in May 2003, but an end to the large-scale  US troop presence there.  If the US military is asked to stay, albeit in smaller  numbers, the risk is that the troops remaining will become targets.   
 Al Mada reports that Nouri's  coalition partners are stating they are not partners in the talks regarding  withdrawal or extension, that they have been shut out of those discussions. It's  stated that Nouri is taking over the issue and doing so claiming he's  responsible for the security of Iraq. The article reminds that Nouri named  himself Minister of the Interior, Minister of Defense and Minister of National  Security -- instead of naming people to those posts.  These days, the talk is of  thinning the government posts.  Why are there so many posts?   In part because Nouri lost the election.  LOST.  Last week, I was a little  vocal here and very vocal over the phone to friends with NPR about their  inability to file from Iraq.  We won't rehash it all right now (right now, no  promises about a later date) but in a month when 15 US soldiers died in the Iraq  War, they had no report filed from Iraq.  Their person in charge in Iraq?   They'd sent her all over the Middle East.  And we're going to leave it right  there for now except to note that I did not attack the person in charge of the  coverage.  That's Kelly McEvers.  This week I gave a link to her report on All Things Considered  but  didn't include it in a snapshot.  Why not?  It wasn't a good report.  I was being kind and including a link when asked  (actually, when told, "You call me July 4th to gripe about the lack of coverage  and now you can't link to it?").  Kelly McEvers 'reported,' "The trouble started  in March of last year when the parties of Maliki and Allawi nearly tied in  parliamentary elections. Then came months of fighting over who had the right to  form a government. Once it was clear that Maliki had a large enough coalition in  parliament, and that he would become prime minister, the question was what would  happen to Allawi. "  I'm not in the mood to be the remedial teacher who  repeatedly has to correct the record.  What's wrong with those three  sentences?   Are they balanced?  Hell ____ing no.  They were 'nearly tied'?  Well who  won?  Huh? Allawi won.  Doesn't matter if you like Allawi or hate Allawi, his  political slate won.  Not "political parties" by the way.  State Of Law --  Nouri's slate -- is a slate, not a political party.  Dawa is Nouri's political  party.     We're told that Nouri "had a large enough coalition" -- we're not told who  won. And NPR has done a very poor job of conveying the winner in that election.   That didn't start with Kelly McEvers.  That starts the day after the election  when Quil Lawrence is on Morning Edition declaring Nouri's slate the winner.  It  didn't win.  And NPR has shown clear and consistent bias in their coverage.   Allawi's slate won.  If you're recapping, you need to include that detail.   Doesn't matter if it was by one vote or one hundred, the race had a winner, it  was not Nouri.     Reporting was not Quil declaring Nouri the winner the day after the  election.  Ballots weren't even counted and Quil was declaring Nouri the winner  (based on?  Nouri al-Maliki's own polling).  Quil never issued a correction.  He  quickly left Iraq and NPR never issued a correction.  This is not a minor point  and to Iraqis who have followed NPR's coverage it is outrageous.  They did go to  the polls and vote.  They risked a great deal to do so.  Their election had a  winner and NPR -- and many other outlets -- have ignored their voice as surely  as their so-called 'government' has ignored them.  NPR's problem, their  inability to note who won that election, did not start with Kelly McEvers so I  was just going to ignore the report but since I'm now besieged with voice mails  and phone calls about how I've ignored this report, I'm including this  here. The report by McEvers could have been strong but it never will be when  it ignores the reality like whose political slate won the election.  David S. Cloud and Ned Parker  (Los Angeles Times) explore   the domestic terrain in Iraqi leadership when it comes to  extension: At this point, it remains  unclear whether Allawi and Prime Minister Nouri Maliki can make peace. Without  rapprochement, Maliki does not have the political protection to win  parliamentary approval for a security agreement that would allow a small number  of American troops to remain in Iraq. Currently, Maliki relies on the political  support of anti-U.S. Shiite cleric Muqtada Sadr to stay in office, and Sadr  wants all U.S. troops out at the end of the year. Members of Allawi's Iraqiya  list, meanwhile, wonder why they should support an extended American military  presence, when the deal to form a government that the U.S. helped broker in  November has not been realized. They see Maliki serving as acting interior and  defense minister and feel the U.S. government didn't live up to its  commitments. Nouri's assault on Iraqi citizens continue. AFP notes , "Human Rights Watch  called on the Iraqi government Wednesday to revise a draft law it said contained  provisions that violate international law. The New York-based watchdog said it  had obtained a copy of the draft law, saying it curtailed freedom of assembly  and expression, and contravened Iraq's own constitution."  Human Rights Watch issued the following  today :    Iraq should revise its draft law on  freedom of expression and assembly to remove provisions that restrict those  freedoms, Human Rights Watch said today. The draft law would allow authorities  to curtail rights to protect the "public interest" or for the "general order or  public morals," without limiting or defining what those terms  encompass.  Human Rights Watch has obtained a copy of the draft law. Those  provisions, as well as the proposed criminalization of speech that "insults" a  "sacred" symbol or person, clearly violate international law, Human Rights Watch  said. The government is pushing for this legislation in a period when physical  attacks on peaceful demonstrators and restrictions on journalists have been  increasing. "This law will undermine Iraqis' right to demonstrate and express  themselves freely," said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights  Watch. "Rather than creating restrictive laws, the government needs to stop  attacks on critics by security forces and their proxies." The Council of Ministers said in a statement dated May 16, 2011,  that it had approved the "Law on the Freedom of Expression of Opinion, Assembly,  and Peaceful Demonstration," in May and submitted it to the Council of  Representatives for parliamentary approval. Human Rights Watch spoke with  several members of parliament about the draft law who said it had not yet been  circulated or introduced. Human Rights Watch called on parliament not to approve  the law without revising it to remove the restrictions on rights. Free AssemblyThe legislation would explicitly recognize the  right of Iraqis to "demonstrate peacefully to express their opinions or demand  their rights" (article 10), but other provisions would curtail those  rights.
 Under article 7(1), protest organizers would be required to get  permission to hold a demonstration at least five days in advance. The request  would have to include the "subject and purpose" of the demonstration and the  names of its organizing committee. The draft law fails to state what standards  Iraqi authorities would apply in approving or denying demonstration permits,  effectively granting the government unfettered power to determine who may hold a  demonstration, Human Rights Watch said. Article 12 would permit authorities to restrict freedom of assembly  and expression to protect "the public interest" or in the interest of "general  order or public morals" without any qualification. The draft law offers no  meaningful guidance in how to interpret such broad restrictions and is silent on  what penalties protest organizers and demonstrators would face if they gathered  without government approval. The law as currently drafted would undermine guarantees in the  Iraqi constitution of "freedom of assembly and peaceful demonstration" as well  as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which  Iraq is a state party. The covenant makes clear that restrictions on peaceful  demonstrations should be exceptional, and narrowly permitted, only if found to  be "necessary in a democratic society" to safeguard "national security or public  safety, public order (ordre public), the protection of public health or morals  or the protection of the rights and freedoms of others." The draft Iraqi law  includes some of these restrictions without any of the  qualifications. By granting overly broad approval authority  to government agents and allowing them to restrict the right to freedom of  assembly under vague concerns for "public morals" and "public interest," and by  not limiting those restrictions to those "necessary in a democratic society,"  the draft law fails to meet the narrow criteria international law allows for  limits on the right to assembly, Human Rights Watch said.  Protest organizers in Iraq operate in an extraordinarily  unsafe environment. In recent weeks, Iraqi authorities have detained,  interrogated, and beaten several protest organizers in  Baghdad. That makes the proposed requirement for organizers to submit their  names when requesting approval for a demonstration a significant threat to their  personal security.  Protest organizers who wish to stay anonymous should be  allowed to do so, Human Rights Watch said. At the very least, the government  should ensure that the names of applicants would be classified and restricted to  the permit office. The law should be modified to revise this requirement.
 "How can the authorities expect organizers to come forward when  security forces are not only failing to protect them from violence but in some  cases targeting them directly," Stork said. Free ExpressionThe law also contains provisions that would  criminalize speech, with penalties of up to 10 years in prison. Under article  13, anyone who "attacks a belief of any religious sect or shows contempt for its  rites" or publicly insults a "symbol, or person who is held sacred, exalted, or  venerated by a religious sect" would face up to one year in jail and fines of up  to 10 million dinars (US$8,665.52).The law provides no guidance about what might  constitute an unlawful insult.
 Iraq's constitution guarantees freedom of  speech, and the ICCPR holds that "everyone shall have the right to freedom of  expression ... to seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds."  International standards only allow content-based restrictions in extremely  narrow circumstances, such as cases of slander or libel against private  individuals or speech that threatens national security. Restrictions must be  clearly defined, specific, necessary, and proportionate to the threat to  interest protected.
 BackgroundIraqi authorities have taken several steps in recent  months to keep protests in Baghdad from public view. On April 13, officials  issued new regulations  barring street protests and allowing protests only in three soccer stadiums,  though the regulation has not been enforced.
 On February 21, Iraqi police allowed dozens of  assailants, some wielding knives and clubs, to beat and  stab peaceful protesters in Baghdad. During nationwide February 25 protests,  security forces killed at least 12 protesters across the country and injured  more than 100. On that day, Human Rights Watch observed Baghdad security forces  beating unarmed journalists and  protesters, smashing cameras, and confiscating memory  cards. On June 10, government-backed thugs armed with wooden planks,  knives, iron pipes, and other weapons, beat and stabbed peaceful  protesters and sexually molested female demonstrators in  Baghdad. Human Rights Watch observed and witnesses said that security forces  stood by and watched in several instances.     Yesterday Parliament came back into session.  Today?  Iraq Oil Report  explained:       Turning to some of today's reported violence, Reuters notes  a Baghdad roadside bombing  injured five people, another Baghdad roadside bombing injured two people  (including one police officer), a Baghdad sticky bombing claimed 1 life, 1 man  was shot dead by his Kirkuk home, a Mosul roadside bombing claimed the life of 1  Iraqi soldier, a Mosul bombing claimed the life of 1 Iraqi woman and a Mosul  armed clash led to 4 deaths and two people being injured.  Moving over to the United States, Elisha Dawkins is an Iraq War veteran who  serves in the US military or did until paperwork became an excuse for the  government to persecute him. Carol Rosenberg (Miami Herald) reports  he accepted a  probation deal yesterday which should allow him to remain in the US and in the  Navy, "In a surprise, his court-appointed lawyer Clark Mervis notified Judge  Cecilia Altonaga that they had accepted the offer late Monday. Details were  still secret Tuesday but his attorney said it did not address the issue of  Dawkins' citizenship. Separately, the U.S. immigration agency has agreed not to  detain him on a 1992 removal order." Susannah Nesmith (New York Times) adds , "Before  serving in the Navy, he was in the Army, and both branches believed he was a  citizen when he enlisted, as did the State Department when it issued him a  passport, in spite of a deportation order dating to 1992." Whether or not Elisha  is a US citizen became an issue after the persecution began. Prior to this year,  he assumed that, as he had had been told his whole life, he was a citizen. Part  of the reason the government agreed to halt any pursuit of deportation is that  they can't currently prove he's not a citizen. Brian Hamacher (NBC Miami)  explains , "Under Tuesday's deal, Dawkins admitted to checking the  wrong box on the application but didn't admit guilt to any crime. The charge is  expected to be dropped, with Dawkins performing community  service." Meanwhile Sgt Jore Rodriguez continues his pursuit of justice.  While he was training and service, CitiMortgage, in violation of the law and  apparently falsifying evidence, foreclosed on his home.  Saturday Bob Van Voris (Bloomberg News) reported  Rodriguez  has filed suit against Citigroup Inc due to the fact that while he doing  pre-deployment training in 2006, CitiMortgage attempted to steal his home by  filing false paperwork insisting "Rodriguez wasn't on active service at the  time, depriving him of protection under the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act". Reuters added , "Rodriguez said his  property was sold at foreclosure for about $137,900, or $13,400 more than his  original mortgage. He said he received no proceeds from the sale. The lawsuit  seeks class-action status on behalf of U.S. armed forces members whose homes  were foreclosed upon improperly by CitiMortgage from Dec. 19, 2003 to the  present." Bob Van Voris also notes, "Bank of America Corp. (BAC) and Morgan  Stanley agreed in May to pay $22.4 million to resolve U.S. allegations that they  improperly foreclosed on active-duty soldiers. JPMorgan Chase & Co. earlier  agreed to a $56 million settlement of claims that it illegally overcharged  military personnel on home loans." JPMorgan, of course, didn't just 'agree' to  pay large settlement. They were first called to the carpet by the House Veterans  Affairs Committee in the US Congress. That was February 9th of this year and  we'll note this key moment from the hearing between US House Rep Bob Filner and  JPMorgan Chase's Stephanie Mudick.Ranking Member Bob Filner: Uhm, how many executive vice presidents  are there at Chase? Or, let me put it another way, how high are you up in the  heirarchy there? 
 
 Stephanie Mudick: Uh, I am a member of Chase's Executive Committee  which is fewer than a hundred employees at Chase -- at JPMorgan  Chase. 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: And what does the 100 people do? I mean,  that's the highest policy making thing in Chase? 
 Stephanie Mudick: Uh, there is an Operating Committee which is a  group of approximately 20 people.  
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: How many executive vice presidents are  there? 
 Stephanie Mudick: I don't have the answer to that question,  sir, I'm sorry.
 
 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: But you'll find out for me,  right? 
 Stephanie Mudick: I will indeed.
 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: Could you fix things if we need to  ask? I mean, you're here on behalf of Chase so I assume that means you can fix  things. Can you fix things? I mean, you said you weren't aware of that hotline  number [a JPMorgan Chase number to deal with SCRA problems which Julia Rowles  testified was just an answering machine passed off as a hotline and one that has  now been disconnected for months]. Can you find it out right away? Can you call  someone and say, "What's going on there?"
 
 
 Stephanie Mudick: Uh, together with-with my colleagues -- There is  -- I would say -- 
 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: Okay, so you can't fix  things. 
 Stephanie Mudick (Con't): -- there are many -- Excuse me, sir. I  would say that we try and fix whatever -- 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: Okay, the Rowles testified that they  didn't have any statements for a year, you hadn't cashed their last mortgage  check. Can you fix that today? 
 Stephanie Mudick: Uh -- 
 
 Raking Member Bob Filner: You said you were going to make them  whole. They've brought up several questions. Can you fix that? 
 Stephanie Mudick: We are trying to fix --
 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: I don't want a "we." You? Can you  fix that?
 
 Stephanie Mudick: I can, together with my colleagues causes  changes to be made in our organization. Uh -- and with respect to the Rowleses  -- Uh, uhm, you know,,we are trying to figure out how we can come to an  agreement --
 
 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: Come to an agreement because of a  lawsuit. But you said you were going to make them whole. As I read your  statement, your average payment to make people whole was seventy dollars. Does  that make people whole who've gone through this stuff? 
 Stephanie Mudick: The-the median payment is $70 and-and let me  explain to you how-how we get to that number.
 
 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: Because you're just dealing with the  amount of interest you overpaid plus some fees, that's all you're dealing with.  You're not dealing with any human costs or any emotional costs or any pain and  suffering as they would say. You're just dealing with the amount of interest and  fees that you overcharged. Right? I mean that's what it says here [holds up  Mudick's prepared statement] anyway. 
 Stephanie Mudick: Congressman, most of the, uh, service members  who were impacted by this, uh, are-are not even aware that they overpaid. And in  part that's because the amount they overpaid was not-not material to  them.
 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: I can't believe that there's nobody  else going through what the Rowles did. But, you know, I mean, you can't make  the changes, you're not making them whole. Why should -- You broke the law. Your  bank broke the law. Shouldn't someone go to jail for that?
 
 Stephanie Mudick: Uh -- 
 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: And who should? Who should? Who's  responsible? Are you as the executive v.p. who was given us by the bank to  answer for this? Should you go to jail? 
 Stephanie Mudick: Uh, we are doing a review internally in order to  -- 
 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: I want to know -- 
 Stephanie Mudick: -- figure out --
 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: -- who's responsible?
 
 Stephanie Mudick: -- who's responsible for what  happened.
 
 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: Are you going to tell us who? Are you  going to give us a person? Or people? That are responsible? 
 Stephanie Mudick: Well we will certainly hold those folks who  are resposible for this accountable.
 
 
 Ranking Member Bob Filner: I want to know about you. You broke the  law. How are we going to hold you accountable? Are we going to know who did what  when?   Late Monday afternoon, the Dow Jones Wire updated a report to note that  CitiMortgage finally had a comment to this story that garnered press attention  over the weekend: They were looking into the charges. Of course they were. Leigh Remizowski (CNNMoney)  reports  on the issue: His home  had also been sold at a foreclosure sale, and the affidavit stated that  Rodriguez was "not on active duty with any branch of the Armed Forces of the  United States or was not protected by the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act,"  according to the suit.
 The law prevents foreclosure proceedings from  beginning until nine months after the service member returns from active duty.
 Remizowski gets a statement from CitiMortgage that offers more  words than they provided on Monday but still says nothing. On the topic of  veterans issues, Senator Patty Murray is Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs  Committee and her office notes:  FOR PLANNING PURPOSES: Contact: Murray Press OfficeWednesday,  July 13, 2011 (202) 224-2834
 
 VETERANS: Murray to Hold Hearing on Gaps in  Mental Health Care
 
 (Washington, D.C.) – Tomorrow, Thursday, July 14th,  U.S. Senator Patty Murray, Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee,  will hold a hearing to discuss access to mental health care services, including  waiting times and staffing levels, outreach to veterans, integration of mental  health care into primary care, suicide prevention and problems identified by the  VA Inspector General in mental health care.
 
 The hearing will include  testimony from:
 
 
 · Daniel Williams – An Iraq veteran who will describe  how an IED explosion during his 2003/2004 deployment to Iraq led to TBI and PTSD  injuries. Williams will describe how those experiences then led to a suicide  attempt in 2004 that was broken up by wife and local police. He will also  discuss how his PTSD was received by fellow soldiers, his concerns over the  stigma attached to the mental wounds of war, and his frustrations with mental  health care administered by the VA.
 
 · Andrea Sawyer – Andrea is the  caregiver and spouse of Sgt. Loyd Sawyer, an Iraq veteran. Andrea will discuss  how even after a suicide attempt her husband was force to wait months for an  appointment at the VA and how despite having severe chronic PTSD he has often  been confronted by other red tape and delays in efforts to get care.
 
 The  hearing will also include testimony and questions from the VA's Assistant  Inspector General for Health Care who will testify and take questions on  investigations the IG's office has done into mental health care challenges at  the VA. A full list of witnesses is available HERE.
 
 
 WHO:  U.S. Senator Patty Murray, Chairman Senate Veterans' Affairs  Committee
 
 WHAT: Hearing to discuss VA's mental health care services
 
 WHEN: Thursday, July 14th, 2011
 10:00 AM ET
 
 WHERE: Russell  Senate Office Building
 Room 418
 Washington, D.C.
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