Tag: Houston

  • US Army starts questioning Bergdahl about capture

    US Army starts questioning Bergdahl about capture

    HOUSTON:
    The US Army and a defense attorney say military investigators have begun questioning Bowe Bergdahl about his disappearance in Afghanistan that led to five years in captivity by the Taliban. Eugene R. Fidell says his client is cooperating with the investigation in Texas on Wednesday. Fidell declined to comment on what Bergdahl is being asked. An Army spokeswoman says Bergdahl was advised of his rights.

    The investigation’s findings will help determine whether the 28-year-old is prosecuted for desertion or faces any other disciplinary action. Bergdahl had been receiving care since returning to the United States on June 13 after his release by the Taliban on May 31. Earlier this month, the Army announced Bergdahl was given a desk job.

  • The 2014 MetLife South Asian Spelling Bee reaches Texas

    The 2014 MetLife South Asian Spelling Bee reaches Texas

    Dallas & Houston winners announced

    DALLAS (TIP): The 2014 MetLife South Asian Spelling Bee (www.SouthAsianSpellingBee.com) continued its 12-city tour past weekend with events in Dallas and Houston. MetLife, a leading global provider of insurance, annuities and employee benefit programs, is serving as the event’s title sponsor for the sixth consecutive year. With a huge turnout this year as well, the Bee attracted some top talent as well as young and new spellers that competed for the coveted prizes and titles.

    “It is very heartening to see that each year we get fresh faces and new talent which is a continuing testimony to our community’s strength in this craft,” said Rahul Walia, Founder – South Asian Spelling Bee. In Dallas, Vanya Shivashankar from Olathe, KS was the regional champ and Ananya Kodali from Highland Village, TX was the first runner up while Ansun Sujoe from Forth Worth, TX was second runner up. In Houston, Shourav Dasari from Spring, TX was the regional champ and Shobha Dasari from Spring, TX was first runner up while Tanya Roysam from Friendswood, TX was second runner up.

    “MetLife congratulates all the spellers who participated in this year’s events,” said Laurel Daring, assistant vice president, Diverse Markets, MetLife. “We’re proud to serve as the Bee’s title sponsor as part of our commitment to the South Asian communities we serve across the country and as a fun, educational contest for the hundreds of students that compete each year.”


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    Houston Winners: (From L to R) Rahul Walia, Founder of the South Asian Spelling Bee with Second Runner Up Tanya Roysam from Friendswood, TX; Regional Champ Shourav Dasari from Spring, TX and First Runner Up Shobha Dasari from Spring, TX.

    Along with MetLife, food brand Kawan and education company C2Education have also come on board as sponsors for this event. As always, SONY Entertainment Television Asia is the exclusive broadcast partner for the MetLife South Asian Spelling Bee and will be airing the series across 120 countries. “Kawan is proud to support this platform that helps in the overall growth of the child.We look forward to seeing this year’s talent and are happy to be part of the process to find the best speller from the South Asian community,” said Tim Tan, Director – International Business, Kawan Food, makers of the world’s most popular Roti Paratha Brand in the world – Kawan Paratha.

    “C2 Education is very honored to be associated with the MetLife South Asian Spelling Bee for the third consecutive year. Seeing the children’s enthusiasm and dedication to succeed is truly inspiring”, said Steve Helgeson, Director of School and Community Partnerships, C2Education. “Once again, we are proud to be associated with the Bee and are looking forward to showcasing the journey in the quest for the best speller.

    We look forward to yet another successful year,” said Jaideep Janakiram, Head of North America, Sony Entertainment Television-Asia. The winners received cash prizes of $500, $300 and $200 respectively. Children up to 14 years of age are eligible to participate and the contest saw spellers of even 6 years of age compete and make it past a few rounds. There are 10 more cities on the anvil and for more information and to register your child,
    please visitwww.SouthAsianSpellingBee.com.

    The top two winners plus one parent each from every city will be given an all expenses paid trip to NJ on August 15 for the FINALS. SONY Entertainment Television Asia is the exclusive broadcast partner for the MetLife South Asian Spelling Bee and will be airing the series across 120 countries. Find us on Facebook at South Asian Spelling Bee and you can follow us on our Twitter handle at Spell South Asian. To reserve your FREE passes to the Finals, please log on towww.SouthAsianSpellingBee.com and fill in your details

    About Touchdown Media Inc.:
    Touchdown Media Inc. is a specialized South Asian advertising and promotions firm based in New Jersey. Now in its 11th successful year, Touchdown has helped clients- both mainstream and otherwise, reach out to the lucrative South Asian market, Touchdown Media represents more than 35 years of collective experience in this niche market. As a full service ad firm, Touchdown has helped many clients achieve their media and marketing goals within the South Asian Diaspora in the US.

    About MetLife:
    MetLife, Inc. (NYSE: MET), through its subsidiaries and affiliates (“MetLife”), is a leading global provider of insurance, annuities and employee benefit programs. MetLife holds leading market positions in the United States, Japan, Latin America, Asia, Europe and the Middle East. For more information, visit www.metlife.com.

  • Seventh Season of the MetLife South Asian Spelling Bee Announced

    Seventh Season of the MetLife South Asian Spelling Bee Announced

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): Touchdown Media Inc., a leading Multicultural advertising firm announced, June 11, the launch of the seventh season of the MetLife South Asian Spelling Bee. MetLife, a leading global provider of insurance, annuities and employee benefit programs, returns as the title sponsor of the contest. The event is open to children of South Asian descent up to 14 years of age. It will give South Asian children a chance to test their spelling skills in their core peer group. Interested spellers need their parent or guardian to register them online at www.southasianspellingbee.com. Organized by Touchdown Media Inc., the 2014 MetLife South Asian Spelling Bee will be conducted in 12 locations across the United States starting on June 14. Regional level events will be held in Los Angeles, the Bay Area, Dallas, Houston, Chicago, Seattle, Atlanta, Orlando, Washington DC Metro, New Jersey, New York and Boston.

    All events will be free to attend and open to the public. “This year is special to us not only because it is our 7th year, but also because 2 of our alumni were named Co- Champions at the Scripps international, sealing our community’s dominance in this craft. We are happy and excited to embark on yet another quest to seek the best speller from our community. The Bee has become a critical platform for the youth and we aspire to continue this effort year after year,” said Rahul Walia, CEO of Touchdown Media Inc. and founder of the South Asian Spelling Bee. Each competition will begin with a written test of 25 words.

    The participants must spell 15 or more words correctly to advance to the afternoon oral round, which will be conducted by experienced pronouncers and judges. The top three in the oral round will receive prize money. The top two spellers of each regional competition will advance to the finals to be held in New Jersey in August. Like last year, MetLife has funded the $10,000 champion’s scholarship that will be awarded to the winner at the finals. “MetLife is pleased to serve once again as the title sponsor of the South Asian Spelling Bee competition,” said Laurel Daring, assistant vice president, Diverse Markets, MetLife.

    “This event allows youth from across the country to test their spelling skills in a national forum that can provide a tremendous boost toward fulfilling a student’s educational aspirations. By challenging themselves in this manner, all of the participating students gain a better understanding of how much they can achieve through hard work and dedication.” Along with MetLife, food brand Kawan and education company C2Education have also come on board as sponsors for this event. As always, SONY Entertainment Television Asia is the exclusive broadcast partner for the MetLife South Asian Spelling Bee and will be airing the series across 120 countries.

    “Kawan is proud to support this platform that helps in the overall growth of the child. We look forward to seeing this year’s talent and are happy to be part of the process to find the best speller from the South Asian community,” said Tim Tan, Director – International Business, Kawan Food, makers of the world’s most popular Roti Paratha Brand in the world – Kawan Paratha. “C2 Education is very honored to be associated with the MetLife South Asian Spelling Bee for the third consecutive year.

    Seeing the children’s enthusiasm and dedication to succeed is truly inspiring”, said Steve Helgeson, Director of School and Community Partnerships, C2Education. “Once again, we are proud to be associated with the Bee and are looking forward to showcasing the journey in the quest for the best speller. We look forward to yet another successful year,” said Jaideep Janakiram, Head of North America, Sony Entertainment Television-Asia.

  • Professor Raj K. Goyal awarded prestigious Middleton Award

    Professor Raj K. Goyal awarded prestigious Middleton Award

    Zafar Iqbal
    WASHINGTON (TIP):Raj K. Goyal received the prestigious Middleton Award at the National Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Research Week on Wednesday, May 22, 2014 for his life time contribution to advancing the field in biomedical research. The Middleton Award is the highest award in biomedical research given by the VA. Dr. Goyal earned his M.B.B.S. degree from Panjab University in 1960 and completed post-graduation (M.D.) at Maulana Azad Medical College, University of Delhi in 1965.

    After a Postdoctoral Fellowship at Yale University School of Medicine, he joined as a faculty member at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston in 1971 and later served as Professor of Medicine at University of Texas Health Center until 1981. He is currently at Harvard Medical School, Boston, holding endowed chairs of Mallinckrodt Professor of Medicine and Charlotte F. and Irving W. Rabb Professor of Medicine. He is also the Director of the Swallowing and Motility Program at the VA Boston Healthcare System.

    He is nationally and internationally recognized for research that has advanced the diagnosis and treatment of esophageal diseases and gastrointestinal motility disorders (diseases of the gut). Dr. Goyal and his team have published more than 200 original research papers in well-reputed medical science journals. Their work has helped provide the foundation for the current understanding of major clinical disorders such as gastro-esophageal reflux disease (GERD), irritable bowel syndrome IBS), and swallowing disorders, among others. Dr. Goyal can be reached at Raj_Goyal@hms.harvard.edu.

  • Houston to get Mahatma Gandhi statue

    Houston to get Mahatma Gandhi statue

    HOUSTON (TIP): A life-size bronze statue of Mahatma Gandhi would be installed at Irving in Texas State, fulfilling a long-cherished dream of Indian-Americans living in the city. A 7-foot tall and 30-inch wide bronze statue of Gandhi, which was cast in Andhra Pradesh, would be installed on a 6- foot tall pedestal. It would have a granite wall as a backdrop inscribed with Gandhi’s memorable words, as well as quotations from Martin Luther King Jr., Nelson Mandela, Albert Einstein, President Barack Obama and others. Irving has a sizeable population of Indians, and a majority is from Andhra.

  • Texas executes man convicted of killing teenage girl

    Texas executes man convicted of killing teenage girl

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Texas on April 3 executed a suspected serial killer convicted of stabbing a teenage girl to death, a day after a federal appeals court rejected his challenge over the drugs to be used in his lethal injection.

    Tommy Lynn Sells, 49, was pronounced dead at 6:27pm CDT (2327 GMT) after receiving a lethal dose of drugs at a state prison in Huntsville, Texas, the state’s Department of Criminal Justice said. He made no final statement.

    Sells was the 15th person executed in the United States this year and the fifth in Texas, the state that executes more people than any other in the nation, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. Attorneys for Sells had challenged the state’s lack of disclosure about the supplier of the drugs to be used to kill him, winning a temporary stay from a federal judge in Houston that was overturned hours later by a federal appeals panel.

    The appeals court said the case might be different if the state were using a drug never before used or unheard of, whose effectiveness was completely unknown, which was not the case. The US Supreme Court denied his last appeals about an hour before the execution. After the stay was denied, attorneys for Sells said they hoped the US Supreme Court and Texas courts ultimately will find transparency essential to protect the rights of prisoners.

    “Without transparency about lethal injections, particularly the source and purity of drugs to be used, it is impossible to ensure that executions are humane and constitutional,” attorneys Maurie Levin and Jonathan Ross said in a statement. Sells was convicted of stabbing a 13-year-old girl to death and attempting to kill a 10-year-old girl on New Year’s Eve of 1999 at the Del Rio home of a man who owed him drug money, according to court documents.

    Sells went to the house to sexually assault the girl as pay-back for the drug debt. He broke in, found her sleeping on a bunk bed and began assaulting her. When she awoke, he stabbed her multiple times and slashed her throat, killing her, court documents showed. Sells then slit the throat of a 10-year-old girl who was sleeping in the top bunk. After he fled, that girl walked to a nearby neighbor’s house to get help, court documents showed. According to various media reports, Sells confessed to as many as 70 murders, starting when he was 16 years old. Texas has executed 513 people since the US Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976.

  • Cops Find 100 People in Texas Home in Apparent Smuggling Bust

    Cops Find 100 People in Texas Home in Apparent Smuggling Bust

    HOUSTON (TIP): Police in Houston find more than 100 people crammed into a 1,500-square-foot, single-family house while searching for a woman who was reported missing.

    Most are from Guatemala, Mexico, Honduras and El Salvador Houston police searching for a woman who had been reported missing by her family discovered a house overflowing with more than 100 people Wednesday, March 19 in what appeared to be part of a human smuggling operation.

    Police discovered the home just outside Houston while searching for a 24-year-old woman who had been reported missing, along with her two young children, the Associated Press reports. When they searched the home, they found 94 men-all in their undergarments and without shoes-and 15 women (including the missing woman and her children) in a 1,500-square-foot house.

    The people were lying in filth in several small rooms with access to only one bathroom, the AP reports. Police spokesman John Cannon said most of the people had been in the home for a few days, and one woman said she had been there more than two weeks. “It was just filth, very squalid-like conditions inside,” Cannon said. “Trash bags with clothing piled as high as you can see. … Some were just sitting on top of one another because there was just no room.”

    Houston police handed over investigation of the matter to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which said the people in the home were primarily from Guatemala, Mexico, Honduras and El Salvador. A pregnant woman and a man were taken to the hospital for treatment, and all others will be fed and questioned. A spokesman for ICE told the AP it was too early in the investigation to say whether the house was part of a human trafficking operation, but it appeared that way. The ICE spokesman also said it has been years since police discovered a house in the Houston area with that many people inside; in 2012, police found a house containing 86 people.

  • SMU student found dead; 100 in the house; execution drug update

    SMU student found dead; 100 in the house; execution drug update

    HOUSTON ( TIP): A house overflowing with more than 100 people presumed to be in the U.S. illegally was uncovered just outside Houston on Wednesday, a police spokesman said.

    The suspected stash house was found during a search for a 24-yearold woman and her two children, a 7-year-old girl and a 5-year-old boy, that were reported missing by relatives late Tuesday after a man failed to meet them as planned at an undisclosed location on the city’s north side, said John Cannon, a spokesman for the Houston Police Department.

    Many of the people in home that authorities said appeared to be part of a human smuggling operation were dressed only in undergarments and they were sitting in in filthy conditions and surrounded by trash bags full of old clothing, Cannon said. When police opened the door to the home they found “a large, large group of people, some sitting on top of one another, very confined spaces,” Cannon said. “They yell out the woman’s name to see if she is in there, and she emerges with the two children.

    They’re OK.” The single-family home, in southern Harris County, is about 1,500- square-feet, Cannon said. At first, officers saw only a mattress on the floor and a refrigerator in an exterior room. It was when they went further into the house that they found the people – 94 men, all in their undergarments and shoeless, 15 women and the woman with her two children – lying in filth in several small rooms, all with access to one bathroom and no hot water.

    Many of the women said they had been in the house for three or four days, Cannon said. One woman said she had been there for 15 days. All of them said they were hungry, thirsty and tired. “It was just filth, very squalid-like conditions inside. Trash bags with clothing piled as high as you can see,” Cannon said. “They were very surprised at the numbers of people inside. Some were just sitting on top of one another because there was just no room.” Authorities said five men have been arrested. Houston police have handed the investigation over to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. ICE spokesman Greg Palmore said it has been five years since officials uncovered a house in the Houston area with this many people inside. In 2012, a house with 86 people was discovered, he said.

  • INDIAN WOMAN IN US FOUND GUILTY OF SETTING HUSBAND AFIRE

    INDIAN WOMAN IN US FOUND GUILTY OF SETTING HUSBAND AFIRE

    HOUSTON: A 27-year-old Indian-origin woman in the US state of Texas has been found guilty of causing arson that killed her husband two years ago. Shriya Bimal Patel was convicted on Monday of dousing her husband Biman Patel in gasoline and setting him on fire in 2012.

    Bimal, 29, died at the burn centre of the San Antonio Military Medical Center, nearly five months after the April 17 incident. She faces five to 99 years in prison. In closing arguments on Monday, the state asked jurors to recommend a life sentence for Shriya, who witnesses have said intentionally ignited an explosion that killed Bimal. Defence lawyers, however, sought probation for her.

    They said Shriya would be deported to India should she receive community supervision. Testimonies ended on Friday when defence attorneys called their only witness, an associate professor of Indian culture from the University of Texas. Her lawyers have argued that her husband killed himself and forced her to help.

    Prosecutors said Shriya, who had studied in London and lived in Dubai was used to an upper-class lifestyle, was upset because Bimal did not lived up to her expectations. They said she was disappointed that Bimal had been laid off from a telemarketing job and was struggling to pay his rent.

  • FBI docs reveal alleged Islamist terror training compound in Texas

    FBI docs reveal alleged Islamist terror training compound in Texas

    AUSTIN, TX (TIP): About three hours away from Austin, Texas, sits what declassified FBI documents say is an alleged Islamist training compound, the Clarion Project reported Tuesday, March 11.

    According to the Clarion Project, the enclave in Texas is one of 22 such compounds owned by the group, Muslims of the Americas, an organization linked to radical Pakistani Muslim cleric Sheikh Mubarak Ali Gilani. According to the documents obtained by Clarion, the network is headquartered in “Islamberg,” a community in rural New York.

    The Texas compound, located in Brazoria County near Sweeny, is known as “Mahmoudberg.” According to Clarion, a spokesman for the group declared the U.S. to be a Muslim-majority country, a claim easily debunked.Clarion also cited a 2007 FBI report that said MOA members have been involved in at least 10 murders, one disappearance, three firebombings, one attempted firebombing, two explosive bombings and one attempted bombing.

    “The documented propensity for violence by this organization supports the belief the leadership of the MOA extols membership to pursue a policy of jihad or holy war against individuals or groups it considers enemies of Islam, which includes the U.S. Government. Members of the MOA are encouraged to travel to Pakistan to receive religious and military/terrorist training from Sheikh Gilani,” the document added.

    Local residents have reported gunfire in the area, but that is common in rural Texas. Clarion posted pictures of shells it claims to have found in the vicinity. The compound was also the site of a 2002 shooting incident where one member of the group reportedly shot another. FBI documents revealed that group members did not cooperate with authorities and women wearing veils were not permitted to speak directly with officers.

    The organization has been in Texas since the 1980s and maintains an outreach facility in Houston, Clarion added. Authorities also raided a nearly 45-acre “compound” about 70 miles south of Dallas in 1991 after a MOA/Jamaat-ul-Fuqra bomb plot in Toronto was foiled. The organization is allowed to operate in the country, Clarion said, because the State Department has not designated MOA/Jamaat ul-Fuqra as a Foreign Terrorist Organization.

    “The group is thus permitted to organize in the U.S. until that happens,” Clarion said, even though the State Department has recognized the organization’s terrorist agenda. In 1998, the State Department called the group an “Islamic sect that seeks to purify Islam through violence.” “Jamaat ul-Fuqra has never been designated as a Foreign Terrorist Organization. It was included in several recent annual terrorism reports under ‘other terrorist groups,’ i.e., groups that had carried out acts of terrorism but that were not formally designated by the Secretary of State.

    However, because of the group’s inactivity during 2000, it was not included in the most recent terrorism report covering that calendar year,” a State Department spokesman said in 2002. Nevertheless, the FBI is concerned about the organization, and Clarion said the group needs to be designated a Foreign Terrorist Organization “before it’s too late.”

  • Indian Cinema Megastar Vidya Balan joins the IIFA on a multi-city promotional tour in the US

    Indian Cinema Megastar Vidya Balan joins the IIFA on a multi-city promotional tour in the US

    NEW YORK, NY (TIP): The International Indian Film Academy (IIFA) is visiting the United States for a special multi-city promotional tour of New York, Houston, Tampa and Orlando from the 11th – 14th of March.

    Accompanying them is one of Indian cinema’s biggest names, actress Vidya Balan who will spread the word about the upcoming IIFA Celebrations presented by Freedom Health. The Videocon d2h IIFA Weekend 2015 will be held from the 23rd to the 26th of April in Tampa Bay. IIFA partnered US Bollywood Enterprise on the New York leg of the US promotional tour.

    Actor, Vidya Balan said, “Having traveled to a number of exotic locales the world over, IIFA has made its mark on the map, educating the world about Indian Cinema. Going forward, I am very pleased to be a part of IIFA’s landmark journey, as they venture into the United States, in Tampa Bay. I am excited to be a part of the IIFA Master Class this year and look forward to engaging with my fans in the US.”

  • Indian arrested in US for sexually assaulting fellow passenger

    Indian arrested in US for sexually assaulting fellow passenger

    WASHINGTON (TIP): A 61-year-old Indian national has been arrested in the US on charges of sexually assaulting a fellow woman passenger aboard a domestic flight.

    Devender Singh, who lives in Baton Rouge, was arrested on Sunday by the FBI after the plane arrived in Newark. He appeared in New Jersey Court yesterday to face a complaint charging him with one count of abusive sexual contact.

    If convicted, Singh faces a maximum potential penalty of two years in prison and a $250,000 fine, or twice the gain or loss from the offense. According to the filed complaint, Singh was seated next to a woman who occupied a window seat on a United Airlines flight from Houston to Newark. The woman did not know Singh.

    While the plane was in the air, the woman fell asleep. Prosecutors said Singh allegedly kissed her face and sexually assaulted her while she was sleeping. “After pushing Singh off of her and telling him to get away, the woman went to the back of the plane and told a flight crew member what had happened, asking that the police be present when the plane landed,” federal prosecutors said. Federal government has exclusive jurisdiction over all sexual abuse cases that occur on aircraft in flight in the United States. Britain explores India-British film heritage.

  • Two Indian-American students go missing

    Two Indian-American students go missing

    NEW YORK (TIP): Even as search continues for an Indian-American nursing student who went missing in New York 10 days ago another India native has mysteriously vanished on a spring break trip to Florida.

    Reny Jose, who arrived in Panama City Beach, Florida Saturday, March 1, disappeared Monday evening, the Houston Chronicle reported citing Florida’s Bay County Sheriff’s Office. A police spokesperson said Jose’s clothing were found in a garbage can behind the house.

    Rice University informed students of Jose’s disappearance Tuesday, said Rice spokesman B.J. Almond. Almond said the 21-year-old senior is a native of Latham, a suburb of Albany, New York. According to Jose’s Facebook page, he graduated from Latham’s Shaker High School before enrolling at Rice to study mechanical engineering.

    Jose’s sister, Reashma Jose, has created a Facebook page to help find her brother. Meanwhile, the Nassau county police department’s missing persons squad is seeking the public’s help in locating Jasmine V. Jospeh, a 22-year-old female college student from Syosset, according to Newsday.

    Her parents said Saturday that they had paid for their daughter to enrol at New York Institute of Technology for the fall 2013 semester. But university officials said Jasmine Joseph, who would have been a junior, hadn’t been a student at school in Old Westbury since last May. The parents don’t know for sure whether she had been attending class, and they haven’t seen any of her grades, Newsday said.

    They never, however, suspected anything suspicious about their daughter’s behavior. The family has set up a Facebook page and put up fliers in the neighborhood with the hopes of gaining any clues into their daughter’s disappearance. Last month, yet another Indian-origin student Pravin Varughese, who had gone missing in Illinois, was found dead in a wooded area in Carbondale. The Southern Illinois University student from Morton Grove had disappeared after getting into a dispute with an acquaintance who was giving him a ride.

  • 101-year-old man to contest US Congressional polls

    101-year-old man to contest US Congressional polls

    HOUSTON (TIP): Better late than never! A 101-year-old man in the US has launched a bid to enter the House of Representatives and contest the Congressional polls. Joe Newman from Sarasota, Florida, will compete for Florida’s 16th Congressional District.

    After living for 101-years, Newman has seen what this country is capable of and he believes Congress can do much better, the WFLA-TV reported. He will be running as a write-in candidate for a Congressional seat that covers Sarasota and Manatee Counties during the election later this year. It can be said that experience is the greatest teacher and Newman has plenty he wants to share.

    “You learn through life you have certain responsibilities. And if you don’t fulfil them, how can you look in the mirror?” Newman was quoted as saying. He has seen this country go through some challenges, such as the Great Depression when he was 16-years old. “If people are saying, who is this fool at 101 and running? Call me a fool.

    I’m sorry, but I’ve got to get out and convince John and convince Jim, hey think! What is the best thing our society can do and what is the responsibility of our society?” he said. “My hope is that we get a chance to speak out and make people reflect on what you want from your society,” he added. Newman’s mother ran a grocery store in their Indiana home and she used food to help pay off the mortgage.

    Later, after graduating from the University of Notre Dame, Newman got a job spreading awareness about a new federal program called Social Security. “That was our job, to sell them why a program like Social Security is essential to the economy and to society,” Newman said. Now Newman has a new message to share; he feels the government should be focused on improving society and not catering to special interests. So he is running for Congress.

  • Body of missing world traveler Leanne Bearden found in Texas

    Body of missing world traveler Leanne Bearden found in Texas

    HOUSTON (TIP): After spending nearly two years criss-crossing the world, Leanne Hecht Bearden’s adventures — and life — ended abruptly in woods near a home in central Texas.

    Authorities announced Thursday, February 13 that a body believed to be the 33-year-old woman had been found in Garden Ridge, the same city where she was last seen January 17 heading out from her in-laws’ house for what was supposed to be a one-hour walk. Her family later confirmed her death, saying on a Facebook page dedicated to finding her that they were “understandably devastated.” “Leanne was a lovely and remarkable young woman,” the family said, “and we will all miss her greatly.”

    Just a few hours earlier Thursday, a post on the same page echoed the optimism and energy that had marked the family’s efforts to find Bearden. “DON’T LET UP!” they urged all those who had joined them in looking for Bearden. “We are still hopeful.” That hope was dashed after a phone call from a man to police around 12:15 p.m. (1:15 p.m. ET) saying there was a body “in a wooded area near his home in Garden Ridge,” city police Chief Donna O’Conner said. O’Conner said responding officers “located what we believe to be the body of Leanne Bearden.” “We will reserve any information regarding the cause of death until an autopsy has been performed,” the chief said.

    “Our thoughts are with the Bearden and Hecht families and (we) ask that you respect them in their time of grief.” Bearden and her husband, Josh Bearden, had climbed Mount Kilimanjaro, gone swimming in the Dead Sea and attended an Indian wedding, among many, many adventures. Leanne Bearden documented their epic 22-month trek in a blog. Then, in December, the couple returned to the United States, spending a short time in Georgia before heading to visit Josh’s family in Garden Ridge, just northeast of San Antonio, according to her brother Michael Hecht.

    Coming back to her native country wasn’t necessarily easy, her family suggested. “The pressure of transitioning from her two-year trip back into what we consider ‘normal’ life seems to have left her very anxious and stressed,” they said. After she went missing, relatives and friends worked intently to spread the word as the search for her — on the ground and from the air, using helicopters — expanded. One such search, on one day in January, covered 23 acres. Garden Ridge police noted their serious concern about Bearden that month, while adding “there is no indication at this time that (her disappearance) is criminal in nature.”

    Her family, meanwhile, acknowledged on Facebook that “there is evidence that Leanne may have voluntarily left the area.” Whether or not that was true, the family pleaded for the public’s help finding her given that — for all her travels — Bearden “is extremely vulnerable,” “is small in stature” and “her mental and physical status is uncertain.” “We fear for her greatly,” her family said.

  • Texas executes female murderer Suzanne Basso

    Texas executes female murderer Suzanne Basso

    Awoman convicted of murder in Texas has been put to death, only the 14th time a female has been executed in the US in nearly four decades. Suzanne Basso, 59, was pronounced dead from lethal injection at 18:26 local time Wednesday (00:26 GMT Thursday). She was found guilty of the 1998 torture and killing of a mentally impaired man she had promised to marry.

    Hours earlier, the Supreme Court rejected her lawyer’s appeal that she was not mentally competent. Basso reportedly did not make a final statement, and smiled at two friends attending the execution. An Associated Press journalist said the condemned woman appeared to be about to cry. ‘Heinous killer’ the lethal dose of pentobarbital was administered, she began snoring, then her breathing stopped. She was declared dead within 11 minutes of the injection.

    Basso was sentenced to death for luring Louis Musso, 59, from the state of New Jersey and killing him in an effort to collect his insurance and benefits. His battered body, washed with bleach, was found in a ditch outside Houston, Texas. Musso was burned with cigarettes and viciously beaten by Basso and five accomplices. But Basso was the only one of the six defendants who received the death penalty. In a Supreme Court brief, Basso’s lawyer Winston Cochran said his client had been unfairly singled out.

    “She was grossly obese, a sour personality, unattractive,” he was quoted by the AFP news agency as saying. “Right from the beginning, they said we’re going to go with the theory that she’s the ring leader.” But Basso’s own daughter was among witnesses who testified against her at trial, telling of physical and sexual abuse at the hands of her mother.

    “Suzanne ran the show for sure,” Colleen Barnett, the former assistant district attorney who prosecuted Basso, told the Associated Press. “She was the one in charge. She directed them. She wanted the money. She’s a heinous killer.” Women make up about 2% of condemned US inmates, with only 60 out of 3,100 on death row. Nearly 1,400 men have been put to death since the US Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976.

  • Two Texas energy giants take multibillion-dollar dispute to jury

    Two Texas energy giants take multibillion-dollar dispute to jury

    DALLAS (TIP): Energy Transfer Partners of Dallas contends that Houston-based Enterprise Products Partners broke its commitment to jointly build a pipeline from Cushing, Okla., to Houston.

    Energy Transfer Partners argues that Enterprise and Enbridge Inc. of Calgary, Alberta, conspired to cut Energy Transfer Partners out of the deal. Enterprise and Enbridge, in court documents, say Energy Transfer Partners’ lawsuit is without merit because there never was an actual partnership or joint venture with Energy Transfer Partners.

    “Energy Transfer Partners is trying to get in the courthouse what it could not achieve in the marketplace,” lawyers for Enterprise said in court documents asking the judge to dismiss the case. Dallas County District Judge Emily Tobolowsky denied the request. Jury selection started Monday, and the trial is expected to last four weeks.

    “This is going to be a great case because the issues are important and there are so many great lawyers involved,” said David Elrod, a Dallas trial lawyer whose practice focuses on energy litigation. The case pits some of Texas’ most prominent trial lawyers against each other. Dallas trial lawyer Mike Lynn of Lynn Tillotson Pinker & Cox represents Energy Transfer Partners. David Beck of Beck Redden in Houston and Dick Sayles of Sayles Werbner are defending Enterprise.

    Dallas attorney Jeffrey Levinger and a team from Sullivan & Cromwell in California represent Enbridge. All of the lawyers declined to comment on the case. The trial is expected to provide insight into the business operations and strategic thinking of leaders at three of the largest and fastest-growing oil companies in North America. Top executives at all three companies are expected to testify. The issue is whether Energy Transfer Partners and Enterprise legally formed a partnership to build the pipeline from Cushing, which is a major oil hub, to Houston, where the crude could be refined or shipped.

    Energy Transfer Partners says yes. The Dallas-based energy conglomerate, which has about $50 billion in oil and gas assets, claims that Enterprise majority owner and chairman Dan Duncan of Houston approached Energy Transfer Partners about a joint venture in the months before he died in 2010. Enterprise, which has an estimated $38 billion in assets, and Energy Transfer Partners renewed discussions in spring 2011 and signed a nonbinding agreement a few weeks later. “ETP and Enterprise shared joint control over the partnership’s commercial activities, jointly meeting with potential customers, jointly marketing the partnership to potential customers and jointly making operational decisions,” Energy Transfer Partners’ lawyers say in court records.

    “The parties unequivocally and repeatedly told potential pipeline customers, regulators and investment banks in formal written materials that they had formed a joint venture and that the parties had agreed to share profits and losses on a 50-50 basis,” Energy Transfer Partners claims. The two companies, which called their new venture Double E Pipeline, even signed a deal in August 2011 with Chesapeake Energy to ship “at least 100,000 barrels of oil per day on the Double E Pipeline for a 10-year period.”

    Less than a month later, Enterprise announced that it was ending its relationship with Energy Transfer Partners to do a similar partnership with Enbridge, which has about $30 billion in oil and gas assets and annual revenue of about $11 billion. Energy Transfer Partners claims that Enterprise and Enbridge conspired to end the joint venture with Energy Transfer Partners, which is seeking more than $1.2 billion in actual and punitive damages. Enterprise and Enbridge argue that Enterprise legally backed out of the proposed joint venture. Enterprise lawyers, in court documents, point to the April 21, 2011, letter between the two companies as proof that their partnership had not been finalized.

    “No binding or enforcement obligations shall exist between the parties with respect to the [relationship] unless and until the parties have received their respective boards’ approvals,” the agreement stated. “The parties made crystal clear that they had not yet agreed to undertake the proposed joint venture,” Enterprise lawyers said in court records. “Despite months of hard work by Enterprise’s employees, Enterprise and ETP were unable to secure sufficient commitments from prospective shippers of crude oil to make the proposed joint venture with ETP commercially viable.” Energy Transfer Partners lawyers, in court documents, say the relationship between the two companies had moved well beyond the terms agreed to in the April 2011 letter. Lawyers for Energy Transfer Partners argue that Texas law liberally defines the existence of a business partnership, even in some cases in which the parties involved claim there is no such partnership, much like the existence of a common-law marriage under Texas family law.

  • Doomsdayers’ underground survival shelters spread across Texas

    Doomsdayers’ underground survival shelters spread across Texas

    HOUSTON (TIP): Texas is a home for survivalists. Underground bunkers are being built faster here than in any other state. Doomsdayers see Texas as a safe haven for bunkers and guns. And a Houston man is responsible.

    His atlas survival shelters are among the most popular in the country, and now we’re getting to know him. Ron Hubbard may seem eccentric. He’s got plenty of weapons, ammunition, food, water and a secret bunker. “It’s strictly defensive. Nobody is looking for a fight,” he said. “A shelter is more secretive than a bank account.” But far from eccentric, Hubbard is a businessman. “The U.S. Constitution is under attack,” Hubbard said.He’s selling bunkers to a booming clientele.

    “It’s got four bunks, it will have a couch, and a little entertainment center and a TV,” Hubbard said. And it all starts in Los Angeles, his construction hub. “They are afraid of the U.S. government and where this country is headed,” Hubbard said. “They see a battle in the future. They see the Constitution being trampled. They see the 1st Amendment gone, they see the 2nd Amendment gone.” That brings U.S. back to the Lone Star State.

    Hidden deep in the most remote areas of Texas are hundreds of survival shelters, secret bunkers. “People who have bunkers are not looking for a fight, they’re looking to sit a fight out,” Hubbard said. “You can drive within 20 feet of a bunker and not know it’s there.” The ideal setting for a bunker is in the middle of nowhere. It’s a secret location for most, surrounded by plenty of weapons, enough food, water and of course, ammunition to last for several years.

    “You have a sense that you’re invisible because nobody can get to you down here,” Hubbard said. The living quarters are like a regular home. You’re 20 feet underground, but the bunkers carry all the conveniences of home and much more. Their cost ranges from $40,000-$400,000. None of his buyers want to go on camera, but there reasons for buying a bunker are the same — they fear a collapse of the Constitution and a one world order. “The people who buy shelters are typically very professional, they’re very patriotic, they believe in the Constitution,” Hubbard said. And in the past year, sales have dramatically increased.

    “When they think of a zombie, they think of people that in the worst-case scenario are looking for food and water, they’re desperate. And they will look like zombies because they will be starving and desperate. They will be willing to kill you to take what you got,” Hubbard said. So, the Doomsdayers wait, prepared for the worst, hoping for the best. And they’re always ready for a fight.

  • Texas executes Mexican man despite his nation’s objections

    Texas executes Mexican man despite his nation’s objections

    HUNTSVILLE (TIP) A Mexican national was executed January 22 night in Texas for killing a Houston police officer, despite pleas and diplomatic pressure from the Mexican government and the U.S. State Department to halt the punishment.

    Edgar Tamayo, 46, received a lethal injection for the January 1994 fatal shooting of Officer Guy Gaddis, 24. Asked by a warden if he had a final statement, he mumbled “no” and shook his head. As the lethal dose of pentobarbital began taking effect, he took a few breaths and then made one slightly audible snore before all movement stopped.

    He was pronounced dead 17 minutes after the drug was administered, at 9:32 p.m. CST. Tamayo never looked toward Gaddis’ mother, two brothers and two other relatives who watched through a window. He selected no witnesses of his own. There were several dozen police officers and supporters of the slain patrolman revving their motorcycles outside of the prison before witnesses were let inside the death chamber.

    The execution, the first this year in the nation’s most active death penalty state, came after the U.S. Supreme Court and lower federal courts rejected lastday appeals and Texas officials spurned arguments that Tamayo’s case was tainted because he wasn’t informed, under an international agreement, that he could get legal help from the Mexican consulate after his arrest for the officer’s slaying. Attorneys had also argued unsuccessfully that Tamayo was mentally impaired, making him ineligible for execution, and that the state’s clemency procedures were unfair.

    The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles on Tuesday had rejected Tamayo’s request for clemency. “It doesn’t matter where you’re from,” Perry spokeswoman Lucy Nashed said. “If you commit a despicable crime like this in Texas, you are subject to our state laws, including a fair trial by jury and the ultimate penalty.” Gaddis, who had been on the force for two years, was driving Tamayo and another man from a robbery scene when evidence showed the officer was shot three times in the head and neck with a pistol Tamayo had concealed in his pants.

    The car crashed, and Tamayo fled on foot but was captured a few blocks away, still in handcuffs, carrying the robbery victim’s watch and wearing the victim’s necklace. Mexican officials and Tamayo’s attorneys contend he was protected under a provision of the 1963 Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. Legal assistance guaranteed under that treaty could have uncovered evidence to contest the capital murder charge or provide evidence to keep Tamayo off death row, they said. Records show the consulate became involved or aware of the case just as his trial was to begin.

    Secretary of State John Kerry previously asked Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott to delay Tamayo’s punishment, saying it “could impact the way American citizens are treated in other countries.” The State Department repeated that stance Wednesday. But Abbott’s office and the Harris County district attorney opposed any delays. At least two other inmates in circumstances similar to Tamayo’s were executed in Texas in recent years. The Mexican government said in a statement this week it “strongly opposed” the execution and said failure to review Tamayo’s case and reconsider his sentence would be “a clear violation by the United States of its international obligations.”

    Tamayo was in the U.S. illegally and had a criminal record in California, where he had served time for robbery and was paroled, according to prison records. Tamayo was among more than four dozen Mexican nationals awaiting execution in the U.S. when the International Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherlands, ruled in 2004 they hadn’t been advised properly of their consular rights. The Supreme Court subsequently said hearings urged by the international court in those inmates’ cases could be mandated only if Congress implemented legislation to do so. “Unfortunately, this legislation has not been adopted,” the Mexican foreign ministry acknowledged.

  • Ex-Texas Longhorns quarterback Vince Young files for bankruptcy protection

    Ex-Texas Longhorns quarterback Vince Young files for bankruptcy protection

    HOUSTON (TIP): Former NFL and University of Texas quarterback Vince Young has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. The petition was filed last week in a Houston federal bankruptcy court, listing Young with estimated assets between $500,001 and $1 million and liabilities between $1,001,000 and $10 million.

    The Houston Chronicle reports (http://bit.ly/1edNPn8 ) no specific details on Young’s assets and liabilities were immediately available. The 30-year-old Young is fighting a pair of lawsuits stemming from a $1.8 million loan obtained in his name during the 2011 NFL lockout. A court has granted a judgment against Young to Pro Player Funding, a New York company that made the loan. Pro Player Funding has made several efforts in a Harris County state district court to enforce collection of the judgment, but those efforts remain pending.

  • Emergency declaration allows Texas to help ease propane shortage

    Emergency declaration allows Texas to help ease propane shortage

    AUSTIN (TIP): Gov. Rick Perry signed an emergency declaration late Wednesday, January 22, easing licensing restrictions that will allow other states facing a propane shortage to tap into Texas’ abundant supply of the home-heating fuel.

    Due to severe cold this season, propane supplies are extremely low in more than 20 states across the Midwest and Northeast. States as far away as Maine have requested help from the Lone Star State, which produces two-thirds of nation’s propane supply and houses the world’s largest propane storage facility, said Bill Van Hoy, executive director of the Texas Propane Gas Association which sent a letter to Perry last week requesting the emergency declaration.

    “Texas has the fuel, but motor carriers from other states could not get supplies from Texas because they were not licensed and certified to enter our state,” Van Hoy said Thursday, January 23. The declaration of emergency will help address the shortage by temporarily waiving licensing requirements and rules prohibiting other states from trucking propane from Texas, Van Hoy said.

    The Texas Department of Public safety is also waiving limits on hours of service in Texas to fuel carriers providing emergency relief, he said. Propane is used to heat more than 7 million homes across the United States, he said. A confluence of events, including extreme winter weather and a sharp increase in propane exports, has led to the shortage. Also reducing the supply was a record fall corn harvest when large quantities of propane were used to dry out crops.

    Prices in the Midwest are the highest since at least 1990, according to the Energy Information Administration. The propane supply has fallen from 34 days on Nov. 29 to 24 days on Jan. 10, according to the administration. The supply stood at 42.1 days a year ago. Some out-of-state suppliers have already sent truckers to Mont Belview near Houston, where propane is stored in an enormous salt cavern, Van Hoy said. “This won’t just help those states, it will be good for business in Texas,” he said.

  • Man gives change to a homeless person, gets handcuffed

    Man gives change to a homeless person, gets handcuffed

    HOUSTON (TIP): Greg Snider was in a Houston, Texas parking lot, on the phone making a business call. While in the lot, a homeless man approached his car and asked for change. Snider gave him 75 cents and then drove off. KPRC Local 2 News reported on the shocking thing that happened next. When Snider pulled onto a nearby freeway, a police car pulled him to the side.

    Greg was surprised by how aggressive the officer was, telling KPRC, “He’s screaming. He’s yelling. He’s telling me to get out of the car. He’s telling me to put my hands on the hood…They’re like, ‘We saw you downtown. We saw what you did.’ And I was like, ‘Are you kidding me? I gave a homeless man 75 cents.’” He was dragged out of his car and handcuffed. So what was it that police insisted Mr. Snider had done? Give that homeless man drugs. Again, he didn’t.

    Snider only gave the man some money. Snider agreed to let police search his car for drugs, and they did so for an hour while Greg remained handcuffed. In that time, ten more police cars showed up and pulled over. The search was not fruitful – no drugs were found in the car. That is, because, as previously mentioned, Snider didn’t have any drugs to give. Aside from the damage police did to his car, Snider isn’t happy that the police were actually laughing about the mistake. Mr. Snider has filed a complaint. Police declined to comment to KPRC about the incident.

  • Promoting Goa Tourism in NYC

    Promoting Goa Tourism in NYC

    Goa’s Tourism officials make a stop in NYC to promote the beach community’s charm, hospitality and relaxing lifestyle to Americans

    NEW YORK (TIP): After showcasing the amenities and characteristics of India’s most visited vacation destination all over Europe, Goa’s Department of Tourism made its first stop in North America , in New York City. The goal of the Goa Tourism Road show 2013 was to expose Americans to the magic of this quaint, beach community.Whether tourists want to explore ancient churches or build sand castles on Goa’s 20+ beaches, there is never a lack of indoor or outdoor activities to relax the mind and stimulate the soul.


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    Visiting Deputy Chief Minister of Goa Francis D’souza, Tourism Minister Dilip Parulekar and Nikhil Desai, Managing Director, Goa Tourism Development Corporation addressed a press conference. Seen in the picture are media representatives. Also seen is The Indian Panorama reporter Kajol Bishnoi ( Front row, third from right)

    Goa’s top officials Francis D’souza, Deputy Chief Minister of Goa, Dilip Parulekar, Tourism Minister of Goa, Nikhil Desai, Managing Director, Goa Tourism Development Corporation and Mrs. Sujata Thakur, Regional Director for India Tourism, shared stories about their beloved state. Speaking on the occasion, Mrs. Sujata Thakur said, “Goa is a unique destination, with the magnificence of all elements- Mountains, sea, beaches, and rivers. It has a majestic old world charm, a rich cuisine and, above all, a relaxing atmosphere where tourists can unwind themselves.

    The culturally rich people of Goa are friendly and hospitable and always ready to welcome tourists and help them in every way. While in Goa, one finds all day to day worries disappear. The gala event started with a press conference where Goa officials interacted with US Media. When asked what Goa government was doing to deal with the menace of drug use in Goa which had become a second Mexico or Columbia, Nikhil said the government had steps to control the situation so that tourists could enjoy their stay in Goa to the fullest.


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    Nrityalina Centre for Performing Arts presents a Goan folk dance

    The visiting delegation emphasized that Goa Tourism was keen on tapping the huge base of international tourists by promoting the state during the non-peak months from April to October. The department is currently focusing on North American cities with multiple road shows planned in New York, Los-Angeles and Houston. The cultural dance presentation after the press conference was an impressive part of the road show. Goan cuisine served on the occasion evoked appreciative comments.

  • Diplomats Falling Victim to Maids Pursuing American Dreams

    Diplomats Falling Victim to Maids Pursuing American Dreams

    ” The visa fraud allegedly committed by Devyani Khobragade was in fact committed by Sangeeta Richard as she misrepresented her terms of employment to the US Embassy during her interview with the Consular officer to get an A3 domestic worker visa, which would later enable her to leapfrog to a trafficking T Visa”, says the author.

    Devyani Khobragade’s arrest has resulted in an unprecedented Indo-US row which shows little sign of abating. Since I was Consul General in New York from September 2008 till February 2013, I feel duty-bound to put the situation in a full and correct perspective. Devyani worked as my deputy towards the end of my term. Moreover, I also faced a lawsuit about which some misinformed comments continue to be made in sections of the media. I met (Devyani’s domestic help) Sangeeta Richard several times at the consulate. She not only seemed happy and cheerful, but also struck me as being quite well-groomed and educated – not the usual type of domestic worker. Given the recent history of problems faced by the consulate, I advised Devyani to be careful. I also told her that there were plenty of people around who could misguide Sangeeta and create trouble.

    Cases of desertion by domestic assistants are not new. For decades, domestic assistants accompanying our diplomats to the US have gone missing, preferring to stay there illegally and pursue their dollar dreams. Countless security guards, including many from the police and paramilitary services, have also done likewise. Although the US authorities have invariably been informed whenever this has happened, they have done nothing to nab them. As is well known, the US has a very large number of illegal, undocumented aliens who provide cheap labor. However, in October 2000, the US Congress enacted the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act (TVPA). In terms of this Act, our domestic assistants who abscond can now obtain a trafficking visa by alleging that they were subjected to involuntary servitude and not paid wages as per US laws. They can get a three year T Visa which gets converted to full resident status. Naturally, such persons allege that they would face extreme hardship if they were deported back, as Sangeeta Richard has done.

    In return, they have to cooperate with the law enforcement agencies against the alleged traffickers – their former employers. Then in 2010, New York State enacted the Domestic Workers Bill of Rights, after which there has been a spate of lawsuits filed by domestic workers. HOOK OR CROOK Devyani Khobragade may have fallen victim to a common menace – maids desperately seeking green cards. It is no secret that many Indians go to the US and try to stay on by hook or crook. Thousands of Sikhs have managed to obtain political asylum by alleging that they are being persecuted in India and thus getting full resident-status. Privately, many of them admit that they only took the asylum route as it was the only way they could get a Green Card. However, the US authorities continue to give asylum visas to many Sikh applicants, blindly ignoring the fact that the Sikhs are a thriving community in India, and that our Prime Minister is himself is a Sikh. However, the asylum visa is not available to everybody.

    This is where the TVPA has opened the doors to people like Sangeeta Richard, who can obtain official passports as domestic assistants of our diplomats, get an A3 visa from the US Embassy, reach US shores, work there for some months, abscond and then obtain a T Visa. The visa fraud allegedly committed by Devyani Khobragade was in fact committed by Sangeeta Richard as she misrepresented her terms of employment to the US Embassy during her interview with the Consular officer to get an A3 domestic worker visa, which would later enable her to leapfrog to a trafficking T Visa. Now, a few words about two earlier cases which took place in New York. Shanti Gurung worked as a housekeeper for Dr Neena Malhotra, Consul for over three years. I met her often as she would come to the consulate to attend functions such as Republic Day, Independence Day, Diwali, Baisakhi etc, as well as music concerts, and she was always happy and contented. I was shocked when she went missing on the eve of Dr Neena’s departure from New York on transfer, and even more shocked when she filed a lawsuit a year later against her employer alleging confinement, forced labor, slavery, illtreatment etc.

    No doubt, she did so to obtain a T Visa. Mrs. Santosh Bhardwaj worked as my housekeeper for two years in India and four years in Morocco before joining me as my domestic assistant in New York in February 2009. Eleven months later, in January 2010, she absconded from the consulate building where she lived. Seventeen months after that, she filed a suit against me alleging slavery, forced labor, nonpayment of full wages etc. She alleged that she was not given proper accommodation and was made to sleep in a storage area. She also made an allegation about an incident of sexual harassment. These allegations were prominently reported in the media. Six weeks later, her lawyers filed an amended suit in which the allegation about sexual harassment and being made to sleep in a storage area were voluntarily dropped. The suit alleged that I had not paid her wages at $10 an hour as per the contract. Here, I would like to draw attention to the website of the US State Department which states the following: “As of March 2011, the Department has decided that no deductions are allowed for lodging, medical care, medical insurance or travel.

    As of April 2012, deductions taken for meals are also no longer allowed”. However, Mrs. Bhardwaj worked for me in New York from January 2009 till February 2010, when deductions for perks were allowed by the State Department. If perks are included, the emoluments of my domestic assistant were considerably more than what she was to get under the contract. A fully furnished one bedroom apartment in the Upper East part of New York does not come for less than $2,500! Added to this were the expenses towards water, electricity, heating, air-conditioning, food, medical cover, travel passages (including for home leave) plus a handsome salary. BIASED & HIGH-HANDED The emoluments of all officials posted by the MEA to Embassies and Consulates include salary and perks; the emoluments of a domestic assistant accompanying an Indian diplomat are built into the officer’s own package, and also include salary and perks. It is only after March 2011 that the US State Department has begun to disallow deductions for perks for domestic assistants. Litigation in the US is a very expensive and stressful process.

    Most lawsuits end up in an out of court settlement without acknowledgement of wrongdoing. I, too, had no option but to settle the case. India’s view has been that the domestic assistants of our diplomats hold official passports and should be outside the purview of US labor laws. The US side has not agreed to this, insisting that US laws apply to them. This impasse continues. What about the future? We should either get the US to agree to our position or change our present arrangement relating to the domestic assistants. Our officers should not be caught in this sort of situation arising from how the Ministry of External Affairs interprets the emoluments given to domestic assistants and how differently the US authorities interpret them. This would prevent the sort of ordeal which Dr Neena, Devyani and I myself have gone through. It is understood that the MEA is trying to revamp the system and may itself sign contracts with domestic workers instead of officers having to do so. Will this revamped arrangement shield officials posted at our Consulates fully? I am afraid not, for one must recall the case of Krittika Biswas, a 12th grade student and daughter of a Vice-Consul serving under me in New York.

    She was arrested and handcuffed in front of her fellow students at her school on the charge of cyber-bullying one of her teachers, although she asserted that she had a diplomatic passport. She was not allowed to contact her parents or anyone till the evening, and was kept in a detention centre for 28 hours with prostitutes and drug addicts in the same manner as Devyani. My colleagues and I had to run from pillar to post to get her released. She was not taken back to her school but had to attend a sort of reform school. Later, it was discovered that it was not Krittika but another student who was responsible for the cyber-bullying, but he was not arrested. What can one make of this except that the New York law enforcement agencies were biased and high-handed? The Krittika Biswas case makes me apprehensive that given the US position on immunity, even if we were to revamp our system relating to domestic assistants, we will not be able to guarantee that officials in our Consulates will not be arrested or dragged into law courts for some reason or another in future. The US is a highly litigious country where suing people is a sort of favorite pastime. Family members of consulate officials are not given any ID cards and have absolutely no immunity. Hence, they are even more vulnerable.

    An atmosphere of fear already pervades our Consulate in New York, and the New York Consulate is no longer a sought-after posting for this reason. What are we to do in such a situation? Some of my former colleagues go to the extent of saying that if diplomats posted in our Consulates in the USA do not enjoy immunity, then we should close down these Consulates and do all Consular work from the Embassy in Washington DC, where our officials enjoy immunity. This is not so cynical as it may sound. Firstly, Consular work relating to passports, visas, OCI cards, PIO cards has already been outsourced. Instead of bringing the documents to the Consulates, the outsourcing company could courier them to the Embassy. Secondly, a large number of persons already send their applications to the Consulates by mail, and they would instead have to send these to Washington DC.What difference would it make if someone living in Boston has to send the application to Washington DC instead of to New York? Of course, the Embassy’s consular Section would have to be considerably strengthened for handling the additional load.

    All other work such as information, culture, outreach and economic would also have to be done from Washington alone, which is not so difficult in today’s age of instant electronic communications. DON’T DRAG FEET As regards all the endless protocol work involving receiving and seeing off delegations which keep coming to New York, it could be done by the Permanent Mission to the UN, whose officials enjoy immunity. At present, the protocol load is shared by the Permanent Mission and the Consulate. Again, the protocol wing of the Permanent Mission will have to be augmented. I know that this suggestion by my former colleagues may be dismissed as being too cynical. There is no doubt, however, that our officers posted at the Consulate in New York have begun to feel very insecure after all these recent cases, and the same may also be true for the other Consulates in Chicago, San Francisco, Houston and Atlanta. How will India protect its diplomats posted to the consulates given the US position on immunity? Drastic situations call for drastic steps, and if we can’t learn from bad experiences, then we alone are to be blamed. Foot-dragging will not get us anywhere.

  • Consul General Mulay announces nationwide Indian Festive Food Week

    Consul General Mulay announces nationwide Indian Festive Food Week

    NEWYORK (TIP): A unique nationwide celebration of Indian cuisine was announced at the Indian Consulate in New York Nov 22, targeting 7 US cities with a weeklong Indian Festive Food Week, initially scheduled from 12th December but now slated for mid January, 2014. While announcing the food week India’s Consul General in New York Dnyaneshwar Mulay said it will provide unprecedented gastronomical delight to the food connoisseurs. During the Indian Festive Food Week, an initiative of India Unlimited and Indya One, Indian food lovers can experience the complexity, yet subtly of Indian cuisine through the hands of celebrated Indian American chefs that call America their home.


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    Their food is a unique amalgamation of their Indian roots and American training, a fusion that has set new standards. Indian Festive Food Week is presented by ‘Etihad Airways’ and has ‘Kingfisher Beer’ as their official Indian Beer Partner. The rich flavors of India’s mainstream and regional cuisines, ranging from Punjabi, Awadhi, Mughlai, Rajasthani, Gujarati, Bengali and Udupi, will entice gourmands at select fine dining Indian restaurants in New York, New Jersey, Washington DC, Chicago, Dallas, Houston, Austin and San Francisco. Participating restaurants will showcase their signature prix-fixe menu, including some that will bring out green and low-calorie options. The pricing of the prix-fixe menu will vary by city, ranging from $15 – $40, excluding taxes and gratuities. During the festive food week, various workshops and sessions will be organized with industry experts to create more awareness about Indian cuisine and various regional methods and styles adopted for cooking. Names of participating restaurants and the prix fixe menu and prices will be made available soon on the Indian Festive Food Week website at www.iffw.us Restaurant & Sponsor Contact: info@iffw.us