Pwon Is Campaign Spending a Lousy Idea, or Does it Help the Economy
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments Monday in former Enron CEO Jeff Skilling appeal of his 2006 conviction for his role in the downfall of the Houston-based energy company.Skilling attorneys argue that Enron collapse into bankruptcy in 2001 was so traumatic for residents of Houston that he couldn ;t get a fair trial there and that an addendum to the federal mail and wire fraud statute, under which federal prosecutors have used to send public officials and corporate executives to prison, is unconstit stanley cup utionally vague. The addendum makes it illegal for officials, executives and others to scheme to deprive those they serve and possibly others of the intangible right to honest services.The Supreme Court decision could mean new hearings for Skilling, as well as for Jack Abramoff, who was also con stanley cup victed under the honest services statute.Skilling was convicted in 2006 on 19 counts of conspiracy, securities fraud, insider trading and lying to auditors for his role in the downfall of Enron. He is serving a sentence of more than 24 years at a minimum security prison outside of Denver.Just like his views of corporate governance, finance, integrity and the truth, Skilling 821 stanley cup 7 arguments about Houston and Enron are predicated on twisting the facts, writes Loren Steffy, the Houston Chronicle business columnist.The Atlantic Andrew Cohen sees the case a bit differently:This time, alas, Xils Evidence against financier Epstein is growing, federal prosecutors say
WASHINGTON AP 鈥?Hundreds of clinics pushing unproven stem cell procedures caught a big break from the U.S. government in 2017: They would have three years to show that their questionable treatments were safe and worked before regulators started cracking down.But when the Food and Dr stanley cup ug Administration grace period expired in late May 鈥?extended six months due to the pandemic 鈥?the consequences became clear: Hundreds more clinics were selling the unapproved treatments for arthritis, Alzheimer , COVID-19 and many other conditions. It backfired, says Leigh Turner, a bioethicist at the University of California, Irvine. The scale of the problem is vastly adidas campus larger for FDA today than stanley cup it was at the start.The continuing spread of for-profit clinics promoting stem cells and other so-called regenerative therapies 鈥?including concentrated blood products 鈥?illustrates how quickly experimental medicine can outpace government oversight. No clinic has yet won FDA approval for any stem cell offering and regulators now confront an enormous, uncooperative industry that contends it shouldn ;t be subject to regulation.Although emerging research suggests stem cells could someday have broad use for a number of medical conditions, experts say they should not be used outside of well-controlled studies or a handful of established uses. For instance, stem cells collected from blood or bone marrow have long been used to treat leukemia and othe