Thursday, July 28, 2016

Healey In Contempt of Congress

Isn't that a crime?

"Healey won’t comply with climate change subpoena" by Sacha Pfeiffer Globe Staff  July 26, 2016

Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey is joining with her New York counterpart in refusing to comply with a congressional subpoena seeking records from their investigation into whether Exxon Mobil misled the public about its knowledge of the detrimental effects of climate change.

The records are being pursued by Congressman Lamar Smith, chairman of the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, from Healey, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, and nine environmental, scientific, and philanthropic organizations.

Healey and Schneiderman are investigating whether the petroleum giant knew decades ago that petroleum contributes to global warming and suppressed that scientific evidence.

In a letter to Smith on Tuesday, Healey called the congressman’s July 13 subpoena “an unconstitutional and unwarranted interference with a legitimate ongoing state investigation.”

Schneiderman sent a similar response to Smith on Tuesday.

In response, Smith issued a statement saying that “the Committee is disappointed that the New York and Massachusetts Attorneys General have refused to comply with lawfully issued subpoenas. These actions only raises additional questions about why the AGs refuse to be open and honest about their coordination with environmental extremist groups. The Committee will use all tools at its disposal to further its investigation.”

Smith accuses Healey and Schneiderman of chilling scientific free speech with their investigations.

Healey and Schneiderman began investigating Exxon after a nonprofit news organization, InsideClimate News, published a series of reports in 2015 on Exxon’s research into climate change. The reports said the company’s researchers knew as early as the 1970s that burning fossil fuels could cause global temperatures to rise, possibly leading to “catastrophic” environmental problems. Exxon researchers also developed timelines for those impacts, according to the InsideClimate News reports.

Yet, as Healey pointed out in her letter to Smith, Exxon continues to tell its investors that “while most scientists agree climate change poses risks related to extreme weather, sea-level rise, temperature extremes, and precipitation changes, current scientific understanding provides limited guidance on the likelihood, magnitude, or time frame of these events.”

Healey and others also allege that “Exxon appears to have engaged with other fossil fuel interests in a campaign from at least the 1990s onward to prevent government action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”

In March, Healey announced that her office would investigate whether Exxon adequately disclosed its climate change research to investors and consumers.

It’s unclear what happens next inthe confrontation between Healey and Smith. Typically congressional committees can seek to hold subjects of a subpoena in contempt for refusing to comply. But Healey has questioned whether a congressional committee even has the authority to subpoena records of an ongoing investigation by a state official.

Smith, who has expressed doubts about climate change, has issued numerous subpoenas for research into global warming, including to the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, which last year refused to turn over documents.

One of Smith’s committee colleagues, Congresswoman Eddie Bernice Johnson, has criticized his subpoenas as “a fishing expedition” and said that “NOAA, rightfully, has been reluctant to waste their time and resources” responding to them.

Johnson has also described Smith’s subpoenas as “more designed to harass climate scientists than to further any legitimate legislative purpose” and “a serious misuse of Congressional oversight powers.”-

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RelatedHeat-related deaths in cars spur warnings

Every year propaganda I'm tired of even if true, and how many kids did AmeriKan bombs kill today?

Also see:

AG asks for Mass. students’ loans to be forgiven

She got you an exemption and is looking after your home, too.

State AG's Office

"Shares of Alere Inc. plunged more than 28 percent Wednesday after a report that the Waltham medical diagnostics company faces a US criminal investigation into its billing of Medicare and Medicaid, the federal health insurance programs for older and low-income residents. The report by the Wall Street Journal, which cited unnamed sources, sent Alere’s stock down $12.59 to $31.47 on the New York Stock Exchange, fueling fresh uncertainty about the fate of the company’s agreement to be acquired by medical device maker Abbott Laboratories. Alere, spun off from Johnson & Johnson in 2001, has become a leader in the fast-growing “rapid diagnostics” business, selling devices used to perform point-of-care tests at doctors’ offices, clinics, pharmacies, and homes for everything from HIV to toxicology to cholesterol. It has nearly 10,000 employees worldwide, including more than 100 at its Waltham headquarters. Alere said in April that the Justice Department had subpoenaed documents in a foreign corruption inquiry into its sales practices in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Justice Department investigators also sent Alere a subpoena last month seeking patient billing records as well as information on the company’s copayment collections and forms submitted on patients’ behalf to the federal health insurance programs, the Journal reported."

Oh, almost forgot:

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Nice to $ee Pfizer get them out of a bind.

Baker administration raps Healey’s gun crackdown

She is now firing back.

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Congressional bullying on behalf of Big Oil