Monday, July 22, 2013

Autos troubles, race at root of Detroit collapse

The sun sets on Detroit, Thursday, July 18, 2013. State-appointed emergency manager Kevyn Orr asked a federal judge permission to place Detroit into Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection Thursday. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

The sun sets on Detroit, Thursday, July 18, 2013. State-appointed emergency manager Kevyn Orr asked a federal judge permission to place Detroit into Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection Thursday. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

In this Aug. 18, 2009, aerial photo is downtown Pittsburgh located at the confluence of the Allegheny, Monongahela and Ohio rivers on the north side of Pittsburgh. Like Detroit, Pittsburgh was a community defined by its dependence on a single industry. But as steelmaking crumbled under pressure from foreign imports and the decline of the U.S. auto industry, the city?s population dropped by more than 40 percent between 1970 and 2006, according to a 2013 report from the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. But during those years, Pittsburgh also forged a new identity around health care and technology. Detroit's bankruptcy can't be blamed solely on the city's reliance on one industry that itself buckled. Some point to the city?s political leadership and its reluctance over the years to make tough decisions. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

FILE - This 1920s photo shows employees working in the Packard Motor Car Co. in Detroit. (AP Photo/File)

FILE - This Jan. 28, 2010 photo shows the abandoned 3.5-million-square-foot Packard car plant in Detroit. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)

FILE - In this June 21, 1943 file photo, two white youths help a black man to his feet after he was badly beaten in street fighting during race riots in Detroit. (AP Photo)

Blue-collar workers poured into the cavernous auto plants of Detroit for generations, confident that a sturdy back and strong work ethic would bring them a house, a car and economic security. It was a place where the American dream came true.

It came true in cities across the industrial heartland, from Chicago's meatpacking plants to the fire-belching steel mills of Cleveland and Pittsburgh. It came true for decades, as manufacturing brought prosperity to big cities in states around the Great Lakes and those who called them home. Detroit was the affluent capital, a city with its own emblematic musical sound and a storied union movement that drew Democratic presidential candidates to Cadillac Square every four years to kick off campaigns at Labor Day rallies.

The good times would not last forever. As the nation's economy began to shift from the business of making things, that line of work met the force of foreign competition. Good-paying assembly line jobs dried up as factories that made the cars and supplied the steel closed their doors. The survivors of the decline, especially whites, fled the cities to pursue new dreams in the suburbs.

The "Arsenal of Democracy" that supplied the Allied victory of World War II and evolved into the "Motor City" fell into a six-decade downward spiral of job losses, shrinking population and a plummeting tax base. Detroit's singular reliance on an auto industry that stumbled badly and its long history of racial strife proved a disastrous combination, and ultimately too much to overcome.

"Detroit is an extreme case of problems that have afflicted every major old industrial city in the U.S.," said Thomas Sugrue, author of "The Origins of the Urban Crisis: Race and Inequality in Postwar Detroit" and a history professor at the University of Pennsylvania. "It's been 60-plus years of steady disinvestment, depopulation and an intensive hostility between the city, the suburbs and the rest of the state."

All of the nation's industrial cities fell, but only Detroit hit bottom. Staggering under as much as $20 billion in unpaid bills, Detroit surrendered Thursday, filing the single largest municipal bankruptcy in American history.

"What happened in Detroit is not particularly distinct," said Kevin Boyle, a history professor at Northwestern University who has written extensively about his hometown. "Most Midwest cities had white flight and segregation. But Detroit had it more intensely. Most cities had deindustrialization. Detroit had it more intensely."

Detroit's first wave of prosperity came after World War I and lasted into the early 1920s, driven by the rise of the auto industry. "It was the Silicon Valley of America," Boyle said. "It was home to the most innovative, cutting-edge dominant industry in the world. The money there at that point was just staggering."

More affluence followed in the late 1940s and early 1950s as the auto industry was booming. Tens of thousands of blacks migrated from the South seeking jobs on the assembly line and a foothold in the middle class. In 1950, Detroit's population peaked as a metropolis of more than 1.8 million, making it the nation's fifth-largest city. The transformation was dramatic.

"You've got a vast city of working people who no longer have insecure lives, people with high school and less than high school degrees who can earn enough to buy a house, a car, a boat, and sent their kids to Wayne State University," Boyle said.

But by that time, Detroit's decline had already begun.

The auto industry had started to expand beyond the city and was building plants and putting offices in suburban and rural areas, and eventually sought refuge from the city's powerful unions in the nation's Sunbelt states and even overseas. Between 1947 and 1963, Detroit lost 140,000 manufacturing jobs, said Sugrue, the Pennsylvania professor.

A decade later, as Japanese auto imports started gobbling more of the U.S. market, the hemorrhaging of jobs continued. Membership in the United Auto Workers topped out at 1.5 million in 1978 and stands today at about 400,000, said Mike Smith, the union's archivist at Wayne State University's Walter Reuther Library.

"In a way, it's not unlike a small town that has a textile factory for 50 years, then all of a sudden it closes up and the whole town is decimated," Smith said.

It wasn't an uncommon plight: The cities that rose alongside Detroit came to be known as the Rust Belt.

Like Detroit, Pittsburgh was a community defined by its dependence on a single industry. But as steelmaking crumbled under pressure from foreign imports and the decline of the U.S. auto industry, the city's population dropped by more than 40 percent between 1970 and 2006, according to a 2013 report from the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.

But during those years, Pittsburgh also forged a new identity around health care and technology. It retrained former steelworkers, invested heavily in higher education and launched a controversial campaign to redevelop more than 1,000 acres of industrial brownfields, replacing decaying lots with luxury homes, office and retail buildings, and 27 miles of riverfront parks.

Detroit's unraveling can't be blamed solely on the city's reliance on one industry that itself buckled. Some point to the city's political leadership and its reluctance over the years to make tough decisions.

"I think it (the fiscal disaster) was inevitable because the politicians in Detroit were always knocking the can forward, not confronting the issues, buying off public employees by increasing their pensions," said Daniel Okrent, a Detroit native who wrote a Time magazine cover story on the city in 2009. "They were always kind of confronting the impending crisis by trying to make it the next guy's crisis."

Racial strife also infected the city. Sugrue, the Pennsylvania professor, said some of the tensions surfaced long before the city's infamous 1967 riots. Two decades earlier, between 1945 and 1965, he said, there were more than 200 violent racial incidents of whites attacking blacks in Detroit and almost all stemmed from the first or second black families moving into an all-white neighborhood.

The migration of blacks into Detroit, which helped power its economic rise, was followed by an exodus of white residents for the suburbs. In the last decade alone ? from 2000 to 2010 ? Detroit lost about a quarter-million residents. The city's current population of roughly 700,000 is about 83 percent black.

"Unlike cities such as Chicago or Philadelphia, where segregation produced disinvestment in certain neighborhoods, the nature of segregation in Detroit meant that the entire city suffered disinvestment," Douglas Massey, a sociology and public affairs professor at Princeton, said in an email.

What's left is a Detroit defined by a barren landscape of deserted neighborhoods and abandoned buildings that overwhelms the very recent rebound in parts of downtown. The consequences of that population loss and segregation extend beyond the declining property values and erosion of the city's tax base. The result is an isolated city.

"The racial divisions between the city and the suburbs until very recently remained very hard and fast, creating an us vs. them mentality," Sugrue said. "There's very little political will ... by suburbanites and other parts of the state to provide financial support."

Indeed, it was the state's Republican governor, Rick Snyder, who ultimately pushed control of the overwhelmingly Democratic city's decrepit finances into the hands of an emergency manager and signed off from the state capital in Lansing to his recommendation that Detroit file for bankruptcy. There appears to be little appetite there for a bailout.

"Cities are less powerful in the federal government and state capitals that they were 40 years ago," Sugrue said.

For those directly impacted by the collapse, watching the deterioration of Detroit in recent years has been agonizing.

"The neighborhood is so different ? the street lights go off, there's more violence and gunfire, the elementary school I went to is closed and boarded up," said Sareta Cheathem, a filmmaker and screenwriter who has lived in Detroit all her 42 years. "I remember as a child winning the 'beautiful block' awards . just to see the decay is something that bothers me."

Cheathem said her 92-year-old neighbor was robbed last year and thieves have tried to break into her home and garage. "My heart won't let me leave," she said, later adding, "One more attack and I'm out."

As for the bankruptcy filing, Cheathem said that has been "gutwrenching" and leaves her wondering "Is it going to get worse? Can it get any worse?"

Or will it signal the beginning of Detroit's turnaround and comeback?

Boyle, the history professor, has reservations about what is actually possible in a place that's fallen so far.

"I don't think it'll ever come back to the city it once was," he said. "The bankruptcy is not in itself a solution. It will presumably clear the debt. Something will have to happen for it not to repeat this pattern five or 10 years from now. Hopefully this will make life livable in this city. I think it's doable. But I'm not sure there's the will to do it."

___

Ted Anthony in New York, Kevin Begos in Pittsburgh, Jeff Karoub in Detroit and researcher Monika Mathur in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-07-21-Detroit%20Bankruptcy-The%20Fall/id-dc134db36d8f40b08a7754605a87d3e3

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Sunday, July 21, 2013

St. John's Church in Norristown marks 200th anniversary, refurbishes property

This year?s cool spring weather proved a real challenge for William Feist, who had 27 flats of 36 plants each to get into the ground. But for the longtime sexton at St. John?s Church in Norristown, it was a labor of love and he was not to be deterred.

So, once Mother?s Day had passed (which is, he noted, when gardening outlets will return your money if the plants don?t survive), Feist began his self-appointed task of re-landscaping the Airy Street churchyard and cemetery.

Feist credited the Norristown Garden Club with the design for the garden in front of the church but plotted out the award-winning additions to the back of the property himself.

Now with the gardens in bright array, the church staff and parishioners are inviting everyone to walk up the brick drive from Marshall Street or to climb the steps from Airy Street to enjoy the blooms.

In addition, visitors will be able to get a closeup view of the newly refurbished and repainted exterior of the church as the congregation celebrates St. John?s 200th anniversary. Visitors are welcomed any time of day.

Chartered by the Borough of Norristown in 1812, the church, across Airy Street from the Montgomery County Courthouse, was completed in 1814 and was officially consecrated April 6, 1815, by the Rt. Rev. William White, first bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania.

Organized just nine months after the incorporation of the Borough of Norristown, it is the oldest church in Norristown and the first organized in Montgomery County following the American Revolution.

Feist has been a member of the church since he was 7 and was recruited by his elementary school music teacher at Norristown?s former Lincoln School.

?Back then,? he recalled, ?the music teacher went around to all of the elementary schools, visiting each one once a week. She asked me if, instead of earning spending money delivering newspapers, I would like to sing in the boys? choir at St. John?s and they would pay me. That sounded good to me. Instead of running around with papers, I could sing and get paid. And I loved to sing.?

Employed by the food industry as a loss contract manager for 28 years, Feist said he figured, when he retired, he would go back to college and study for a new career. Continued...

?But I found my new career before I had a chance to do that,? he laughed, ?so now I?ve been here for 28 years.?

And, according to St. John?s property manager, Harry Cornog, ?Bill is the nucleus of everything that happens around here. He keeps everything spic and span inside and out and he is only employed for 20 hours a week. He is here as a volunteer for 25 to 35 hours every week. During growing season, he has to come here on Saturday and then he?s here on Sunday to make sure all are comfortable.?

Cornog, who has been a member of the church governing body, or vestry, for 39 years, with only the mandatory time off between terms, said the church is looking at its bicentennial as a time to try to expand its outreach in the community, to become involved in activities with other parishes and to welcome newcomers to its congregation.

Long famous for its St. John?s Soup Kitchen, ?founded in 1982 as a necessary outreach to the poor of the community surrounding the church,? according to the church website, the church currently serves more than 600 meals weekly as it welcomes visitors for a hot full-course lunch Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays and a hot breakfast on Saturdays, thanks to the efforts of Grace and Cecil Bean and their corps of volunteers.

Cornog said, ?Grace and Cecil Bean have made it the Cadillac of soup kitchens. Around here, the couple is one of our greatest assets.?

?We welcome everyone to the fundraisers run by our fundraising committee,? he added. ?We just had our Strawberry Festival in June and the committee is now working on the Peach Festival for August. Then there is the Christmas Bazaar in November.?

In an effort to revitalize the choir, Cornog said the members have ?just instituted a program where they are getting students from Norristown High and giving them a $200 stipend to put towards their continuing education. Each of the four students selected had to audition at the high school and then audition at the church.

Noting that the church welcomed a new rector, the Rev. Scott P. Albergate, last November, Cornog continued, ?We are trying to get as many new programs started as possible. The future is in our young people so we will try to bring in new families.?

?And bring the church into the 21st century,? declared Feist.

This year?s cool spring weather proved a real challenge for William Feist, who had 27 flats of 36 plants each to get into the ground. But for the longtime sexton at St. John?s Church in Norristown, it was a labor of love and he was not to be deterred.

So, once Mother?s Day had passed (which is, he noted, when gardening outlets will return your money if the plants don?t survive), Feist began his self-appointed task of re-landscaping the Airy Street churchyard and cemetery.

Feist credited the Norristown Garden Club with the design for the garden in front of the church but plotted out the award-winning additions to the back of the property himself.

Now with the gardens in bright array, the church staff and parishioners are inviting everyone to walk up the brick drive from Marshall Street or to climb the steps from Airy Street to enjoy the blooms.

In addition, visitors will be able to get a closeup view of the newly refurbished and repainted exterior of the church as the congregation celebrates St. John?s 200th anniversary. Visitors are welcomed any time of day.

Chartered by the Borough of Norristown in 1812, the church, across Airy Street from the Montgomery County Courthouse, was completed in 1814 and was officially consecrated April 6, 1815, by the Rt. Rev. William White, first bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania.

Organized just nine months after the incorporation of the Borough of Norristown, it is the oldest church in Norristown and the first organized in Montgomery County following the American Revolution.

Feist has been a member of the church since he was 7 and was recruited by his elementary school music teacher at Norristown?s former Lincoln School.

?Back then,? he recalled, ?the music teacher went around to all of the elementary schools, visiting each one once a week. She asked me if, instead of earning spending money delivering newspapers, I would like to sing in the boys? choir at St. John?s and they would pay me. That sounded good to me. Instead of running around with papers, I could sing and get paid. And I loved to sing.?

Employed by the food industry as a loss contract manager for 28 years, Feist said he figured, when he retired, he would go back to college and study for a new career.

?But I found my new career before I had a chance to do that,? he laughed, ?so now I?ve been here for 28 years.?

And, according to St. John?s property manager, Harry Cornog, ?Bill is the nucleus of everything that happens around here. He keeps everything spic and span inside and out and he is only employed for 20 hours a week. He is here as a volunteer for 25 to 35 hours every week. During growing season, he has to come here on Saturday and then he?s here on Sunday to make sure all are comfortable.?

Cornog, who has been a member of the church governing body, or vestry, for 39 years, with only the mandatory time off between terms, said the church is looking at its bicentennial as a time to try to expand its outreach in the community, to become involved in activities with other parishes and to welcome newcomers to its congregation.

Long famous for its St. John?s Soup Kitchen, ?founded in 1982 as a necessary outreach to the poor of the community surrounding the church,? according to the church website, the church currently serves more than 600 meals weekly as it welcomes visitors for a hot full-course lunch Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays and a hot breakfast on Saturdays, thanks to the efforts of Grace and Cecil Bean and their corps of volunteers.

Cornog said, ?Grace and Cecil Bean have made it the Cadillac of soup kitchens. Around here, the couple is one of our greatest assets.?

?We welcome everyone to the fundraisers run by our fundraising committee,? he added. ?We just had our Strawberry Festival in June and the committee is now working on the Peach Festival for August. Then there is the Christmas Bazaar in November.?

In an effort to revitalize the choir, Cornog said the members have ?just instituted a program where they are getting students from Norristown High and giving them a $200 stipend to put towards their continuing education. Each of the four students selected had to audition at the high school and then audition at the church.

Noting that the church welcomed a new rector, the Rev. Scott P. Albergate, last November, Cornog continued, ?We are trying to get as many new programs started as possible. The future is in our young people so we will try to bring in new families.?

?And bring the church into the 21st century,? declared Feist.

Source: http://www.montgomerynews.com/articles/2013/07/21/montgomery_life/news/doc51e43e03caaaf262008087.txt

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Japan's defense boost aimed at China, experts say

BEIJING -- Japan took a "big leap" in using its defense forces to target China last year as the United States at the same time listed China as its greatest potential security challenge, according to a report from a Chinese think tank on Friday.

Observers said the military tension arose from territorial disputes, unease over China's rapid growth and attempts to use China as a scapegoat to justify a military buildup by Tokyo and Washington.

The annual report on Japanese military power, released by the China Strategic Culture Promotion Association, said two of the most eye-catching changes in Japan's defense forces in 2012 were Tokyo's efforts to normalise its defense power and to use it against China.

Last year, then-Japanese prime minister Yoshihiko Noda became the first Japanese government leader to make "strong military-related statements" on the Diaoyu Islands on public occasions, the report said.

Noda and current Prime Minister Shinzo Abe visited branches of the Japan Coast Guard and the Japan Self-Defense Forces in Okinawa. Such visits have rarely been made by Japanese prime ministers since the end of World War II, it said.

Since tensions over the Diaoyu Islands increased in mid-2012, Japan's military deployment, equipment upgrading, military drills and construction of military facilities have all been accelerated, it added.

"Although this is not meant to provoke China into military action, it has undoubtedly complicated and endangered the situation in which accidents might be triggered and the dispute that already existed might escalate out of control," the report stated.

Japan's national defense budget for the 2012 fiscal year "not only reveals Japan's ambition to step up efforts to become a major military power, but also explains its efforts to continue stirring up the so-called China threat", it said.

The budget lists a string of objectives, including "improving the security environment in the Asia-Pacific region and the world".

The report said Noda had been ambitious in "normalising" Japan's national defense and had acted to achieve that aim since 2011, while the Abe administration is even "more enthusiastic" about this.

For instance, since Abe took office in December, the Japanese government has taken "historic steps" in attempting to revise the constitution, establish national defense forces, amend the national defense programme guidelines, exercise collective self-defense, set up the National Security Council, raise military spending and build up military strength, according to the report.

Luo Yuan, deputy executive of the association, said, "China-Japan relations are also disturbed by growing right-wing forces in Japan, which stir up the China threat to justify their ambition to get rid of the shackles of the post-war system."

Fan Gaoyue, a researcher from the association, said tensions over the Diaoyu Islands can hardly be eased in the short term as the Abe administration further strengthens its hawkish stance.

"If the ruling party led by the conservative Abe wins the Senate elections this month, it is likely to make more provocative moves over the Diaoyu Islands to seek public support to amend the constitution and upgrade self-defense forces to an army," Fan said.

It is the second time the think tank has issued reports on Japanese and US military power. In 2012, it became the first Chinese non-governmental body to touch upon the topic.

In its report on US military power last year, the association said the US national defense budget in the 2012 fiscal year had been increased despite appearing to have been cut.

The entire budget for that year saw a slight decrease due to a cut in the overseas contingency operations budget in Pakistan and Afghanistan. However, the base budget was $553.1 billion, an increase of $4.2 billion from the 2011 fiscal year, the report said.

It also said that according to the new US guidance for defense strategy, issued in January 2012, China and Iran are of particular concern for the US.

"In terms of threat assessment, the US takes China as its greatest potential security challenge," the report said.

A series of US-led joint military exercises, such as Rim of the Pacific 2012 and Exercise Gold Cobra 2012, apparently had China as a target, it said.

Rim of the Pacific 2012, which was expanded to cover 22 participant countries including India and Russia, did not invite China, one of the major nations in the region, the report added.

Luo Yuan said Washington is concerned that a rising China may challenge its leading role in global affairs.

"China is willing to enhance trust with the two countries (Japan and the US) through cooperation and improving its military transparency," Luo said. "But Beijing also has to prepare itself economically and defensively for any emergency triggered by outside provocation."
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Source: http://www.stripes.com/news/pacific/japan-s-defense-boost-aimed-at-china-experts-say-1.231461

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Moto X press renders appear, show off slim bezels and slick design

Moto x

Renders confirm earlier partial looks at the upcoming device

Now that we know Motorola is ready to spill all of the beans on the Moto X come August 1st, we were bound to see some press renders hit the Internet. Well-known leaker evleaks has just released these purported first press renders of the device, which reaffirm many of the design elements we've been seeing in the past few weeks. Just as Eric Schmidt showed us, the back of the device looks to have a lightly textured back (by default) with a central camera pod, small Motorola logo recessed below it and a centralized headphone jack above.

Around the front, we see a standard Android home screen with the usual icons shown off in most of Google's device renders. The display looks to have bezels that are nice and small around the sides and on the bottom, with a pretty standard-sized one on top accented with the appropriate camera, speaker and sensors.

read more

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/pLF5EJ1AIo8/story01.htm

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

inoilfieldhell commented on the blog post President Carter Supports Snowden, Says America Does Not Have A Functioning Democracy

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Source: http://my.firedoglake.com/activity/p/1344958/

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Hobby Lobby wins a stay against birth control mandate

By Jonathan Stempel

(Reuters) - A federal judge has temporarily exempted Hobby Lobby Stores Inc from a requirement in the 2010 healthcare law that it offer workers insurance coverage for birth control, which the retailer said violated its religious beliefs.

The preliminary injunction issued by U.S. District Judge Joe Heaton in Oklahoma City, where Hobby Lobby is based, covers the arts and crafts chain and its affiliated Mardel Christian bookstore chain.

He put the case on hold until October 1, giving the federal government time to decide whether to appeal a June 27 decision by a federal appeals court in Denver to let Hobby Lobby challenge the mandate on religious grounds.

A U.S. Department of Justice spokesman had no immediate comment. The government has said contraception coverage is needed to promote public health and gender equality.

The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, a nonprofit law firm representing Hobby Lobby, said there are 63 lawsuits nationwide challenging the mandate.

It said Hobby Lobby is the largest company to be excused, at least temporarily, from having to comply. Hobby Lobby has 556 stores in 45 U.S. states, and has about 13,000 employees.

The Green family, which owns Hobby Lobby, had argued that providing coverage to workers for the morning-after pill and similar contraceptives violated its Christian beliefs.

It also said it could have under Obamacare faced $1.3 million in daily fines by not providing such coverage.

In a written order, Heaton said the size of those penalties, the "substantial" public policy issues involved, and the amount of similar litigation justified an injunction for Hobby Lobby.

"There is a substantial public interest in ensuring that no individual or corporation has their legs cut out from under them while these difficult issues are resolved," Heaton said at a hearing, according to the Becket Fund.

In its June 27 ruling, the Denver appeals court said there was a good chance that Hobby Lobby would ultimately prevail.

It said Hobby Lobby had "drawn a line at providing coverage for drugs or devices they consider to induce abortions, and it is not for us to question whether the line is reasonable."

Lori Windham, senior counsel for the Becket Fund, said in an interview that Heaton's decision "shows that companies can be protected from the mandate, and continue to exercise their religious beliefs in the way they run their businesses."

The case is Hobby Lobby Stores Inc et al v. Sebelius et al, U.S. District Court, Western District of Oklahoma, No. 12-01000.

(Editing by Gerald E. McCormick, Andrew Hay and Richard Chang)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hobby-lobby-wins-stay-against-birth-control-mandate-160019175.html

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Death of would-be Bulger witness raises questions as 'The Rifleman' takes the stand

Jessica Rinaldi / Boston Globe via Getty Images

Stephen Rakes arrives at the courthouse for the trial of James "Whitey" Bulger on June 17.

By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

As James "Whitey" Bulger's closest confederate testified to the gangsters' alleged crimes in a downtown Boston courtroom Friday, police continued to scour a leafy suburb for clues in the suspicious death of a would-be witness.

Stephen ?Stippo? Rakes, 59, had said that Bulger had forced him to sell his liquor store at a cut-rate price in 1984. Bulger?s Winter Hill Gang wanted to use the liquor store as a front for its criminal activities, Rakes was set to testify before he was cut from prosecution?s list of witnesses.

His body was found on the side of the road in the suburb of Lincoln, Mass., at about 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, according to the Middlesex County District Attorney?s Office. Officials said an autopsy had revealed no signs of trauma.?Investigators are awaiting a toxicology report to determine the cause of Rakes? death, and police sources told New England Cable News that they are treating it as suspicious.

Rakes did not have a wallet or identification with him when he was found, NBC News affiliate WHDH reported, and investigators are looking into how he got to the roadside where he was found by a jogger.

One of many potential witnesses who said they had been wronged by Bulger, Rakes said in June that he was looking forward to facing down the gray and defanged 83-year-old Bulger from the witness stand, according to the Boston Herald.

?I?m not afraid of him anymore. I can?t wait to get on the stand and look him right in the eyes,? Rakes told the paper. ?I come here to represent the victims that are afraid to come here. My friends. That?s why I?m showing up. And there?s not one. There?s not 10. There?s hundreds. And they?re still afraid.?

?They took everything from me. They don?t care about nothing,? Rakes told the Boston Herald. ?At least I?m still alive. I?m still alive and I?m grateful for that.?

?The day I see him in a box, not breathing, will be better,? Rakes said in April, according to the Associated Press.

The former liquor store owner gave his story of how Bulger ripped him off at gunpoint in a 2001 interview with the Boston Globe, when Bulger was still a fugitive. According to the account, Rakes and his two daughters were at home in 1984 when Bulger and two of his associates, Stephen ?The Rifleman? Flemmi and Kevin Weeks, knocked at the front door.

With Rakes? 1-year-old daughter on Flemmi?s lap and a switchblade in Bulger?s hand, the gangsters tossed Rakes $67,000 dollars and told him they were taking over his store, according to the man?s account.

?There was not a damn thing I could do,? Rakes told the Globe. ?There?s nothing you can do because they?ve got guns and they?re willing to kill anybody. Life is nothing to them. You?ve got something they want, they?ll take it. And that?s just what happened.?

In the years afterward, Rakes said he never knew when he might see Bulger?s face again.

?I was always afraid they were going to pull up some day and just shoot me,? Rakes told the Globe in 2001. ?Every day I look over my shoulder. I trust absolutely no one.?

Weeks gave a slightly different version of the shakedown story when he testified in Bulger?s trial, saying that it was Rakes who was trying to rip them off when the gangsters showed up at his house armed with guns.

?We didn?t go to him to buy the store. He came to us. It wasn?t your regular extortion,? Weeks testified. Rakes had backed out of a deal to sell the liquor store for $100,000, Weeks added.

That?s a load of nonsense, Rakes told the Associated Press after Weeks? testimony.

?Kevin continues to lie, as usual, because that?s what he has to do,? Rakes told the wire service. ?My liquor store was never for sale ? never, never, never.?

Rakes was convicted in 1998 of lying to a grand jury about the extortion, saying he was afraid to tell the truth. He ultimately cooperated with law enforcement and avoided going to prison. He won a $28 million judgment against Bulger with his ex-wife.

?I can assure you my ex-husband did not commit suicide,? Rakes? ex-wife Julie Dammers told the Boston Globe. ?We have more questions than answers.?

The news of Rakes? sudden demise had the Moakley Federal Courthouse on the waterfront in South Boston chattering on Thursday as Flemmi made his first appearance. He is back on the stand Friday.

?I was going by his house ? I gotta know why he hasn?t come to court, why he hasn?t talked to me. I got a gut feeling, really sick feeling about it,? Stephen Davis, whose sister Debra Davis was allegedly killed by Bulger, told WHDH on Thursday.

But the man who says he?s all too familiar with Bulger?s methods says Rakes' sudden death bears echoes of the bad old days.

?I figure it?s murder,? Davis said.

Related:

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