Monthly Archives: May 2017

Doolittle raid gave America a boost – Nevada Appeal

Posted: May 28, 2017 at 8:14 am

The deck of USS Hornet (CV 8), code named "Shangri-la," pitched and rolled in the swells of the Western Pacific Ocean. Sixteen B-25B Mitchell medium bombers were preparing for a historic takeoff 467 feet and no room for error.

The morning of April 18, 1942, Army Air Corps Lt. Col. James "Jimmy" Doolittle and his 80 "Raiders" were already wide awake. They had trained for this day for months: It was time to bring the battle to the Rising Sun's doorstep.

The planning for the raid was the fruition of a Dec. 21, 1941 meeting, just two weeks after the attack on Pearl Harbor, between then-President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his Joint Chiefs of Staff.

"The Japanese people had been told they were invulnerable." wrote Doolittle in his autobiography "I Could Never Be So Lucky Again." "An attack on the Japanese homeland would cause confusion in the minds of the Japanese people and sow doubt about the reliability of their leaders."

Military strategists gathered intel and calculated aircraft fuel consumption how could their warplanes make the flight to the Japanese homeland? Carriers could only get so close without being spotted and taking off from Japanese controlled Korea was out of the question. It seemed like impossibility.

In January 1942 while in Norfolk, Virginia, Navy Captain Francis Low looked at the painted outline of the deck of an aircraft carrier used for training pilots to make the 300-foot takeoff and landing and was struck with a brilliant, yet crazy idea. A medium bomber (named for size of bombloads it carried and distance) could make that!

Low was the assistant chief of staff for anti-submarine warfare Adm. Ernest King, and proposed his idea.

The aircraft would need to have a range of 2,400 nautical miles (more than 2,700 miles) and be capable of carrying a 2,000-pound bomb load.

Armed with a list of possible aircraft, bomber after bomber was tested and retested again and again. The B-26 Marauder's wingspan was too long and would have collided with the carrier's super structure and the wingspan of the B-23 Dragon was 50% greater than that of the B-25. It came down to two aircraft, the B-25B Mitchell and the B-18 Bolo for Doolittle to choose from. Due to B-18 longer wingspan, the B-25B was chosen to carry out the raid.

Two B-25s were loaded onto USS Hornet in Norfolk and on February 3, 1942 they successfully took off from the flight deck without difficulty. Next Doolittle needed the most experienced men, pilots and enlisted alike. He scoured the medium Bomb Groups (BG) for men fitting this description. The 17th Bomb Group was stationed in Pendleton, Oregon and had already been on submarine patrols along the coast. The 17th had four active squadrons before 1942, and commanders hand-picked 20 five-man crews from a group of volunteers.

The plan was coming together; however, the B-25 was initially only capable of traveling a maximum of 1,350 nautical miles, it needed to go nearly twice the distance. Engineers, mechanics and pilots worked together and heavily modified 24 aircraft for the flight.

From Modification to Departure

The removal of the lower gun turret as well as the heavy liaison radio set helped lighten the aircraft. Mechanics installed de-icers and anti-icers to combat the cold at high altitude, a 160-gallon collapsible neoprene auxiliary fuel tank in the bomb bay and additional fuel cells in crawlways and the lower gun turret. This increased the planes' fuel capacity from 646 to 1,141 gallons. Mock gun barrels were installed in the tail cone to make the B-25 appear more intimidating and deadly as they made their bomb runs.

Another modification was a new bomb sight. These bombers would be dropping their payloads at a much lower altitude than was normal. The more expensive and precise Norden bomb sight, used for higher altitude bombing runs, would be replaced with what the press would later call "the 20-cent bombsight." Developed by pilot Capt. Charles Ross Greening specifically for the raid, the bombsight was proven more accurate at low altitude than the Norden. Two bombers would also be outfitted with motion cameras to record the bombing.

On March 1, 1942, crews picked up the 24 modified bombers in Minneapolis and from there flew them to Eglin Field, Florida. The crews trained in simulated carrier flight deck takeoffs, both low-level and night flying, low-altitude bombing and navigating over water for three weeks.

A Navy flight instructor from Naval Air Station Pensacola, Lt. Henry Miller, supervised their takeoff training and accompanied the crews on the Hornet for the launch. For his instruction and efforts in the raid, Miller is considered an honorary member of the Raiders.

No men were lost during training but some aircraft had been damaged.

Twenty-two were flown to NAS Alameda, California outside of San Francisco. A total of 16 planes made up the mission. April 1 arrived and 71 officers and 130 enlisted men boarded Hornet with their 16 bombers and embarked on a mission that would forever change military aviation. The following morning at 8:48, Hornet departed San Francisco Bay and steamed a path through the Pacific to the Empire of Japan.

There was another hitch in this plan. This would be a one-way trip.

The plan was to make it to China before the fuel tanks ran dry.

SS Hornet (CV 8) steamed out of San Francisco Bay, April 2, 1942, with 16 modified B-25 Mitchell bombers and about 200 men led by Lt. Col. James "Jimmy" Doolittle.

Best known as the "Raiders," their mission was so secret that neither the Hornet nor the base (Alameda Naval Station) was ever mentioned until years later. President Franklin D. Roosevelt only referred to it as "Shangri-la."

Planning the raid had taken months: Finding the right aircraft and the bravest and most skilled pilots and crews had been challenging. Commanders had handpicked 16 five-man crews from a pool of volunteers. Each man knew this was a one-way trip. The danger that they might not come home was very real.

"It was hoped that the damage done would be both material and psychological," Doolittle said in a July 9, 1942 interview. "Material damage was to be the destruction of specific targets with ensuing confusion and retardation of production."

Strength in Numbers

As the Hornet made her way through the Pacific north of Hawaii, she rendezvoused with Task Force 16, commanded by Vice Adm. William "Bull" Halsey Jr. The task force included the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise and her escort of cruisers and destroyers.

The ships steamed toward the Japanese homeland in radio silence. As the sun reached its zenith, April 17, the slower oilers refueled the fleet, then withdrew along with the destroyers while the carriers and cruisers dashed west at 20 knots toward the enemy-controlled waters east of Japan.

At 7:38 a.m., April 18, the Japanese patrol craft Nitt Maru spotted the remaining ships. It radioed the attack warning before being sunk by USS Nashville. The Hornet was still about 650 nautical miles away from Japan.

Doolittle and the Hornet's commanding officer, Capt. Marc Mitscher, decided to launch immediately 10 hours early and nearly 170 nautical miles from their intended launch point.

Doolittle would launch first and lead the attack run; his bombs would be markers for the rest of the crews to follow.

At 8:20 a.m., Doolittle, his copilot Lt. Richard Cole, navigator Lt. Henry Potter, bombardier Staff Sgt. Fred Braemer and engineer gunner Staff Sgt. Paul Leonard taxied into position as the flight deck of the Hornet pitched and rolled in the Pacific swells.

The twin cyclone engines powered up and tail rudders and flaps moved through their pre-flight checks. There would be no looking back, no second chances: It was now or never. Doolittle revved the engines and began his take off down the flight deck: He had just 467 feet to get the bird airborne. On a hope and a prayer, he pulled the yoke back, edging the nose of his B-25 up and into the blue skies above.

Although none of the pilots, including Doolittle, had launched from a carrier before that morning, all 16 planes were safely airborne by 9:20 a.m. their noses pointed toward the Rising Sun of the Japanese Empire.

From America with Love

The crews had 10 military and industrial targets in Tokyo, two in Yokohama and one each in Yokosuka, Nagoya, Kobe and Osaka. Each aircraft was loaded with four specially constructed 500-pound bombs. Three were high-explosive munitions and one was a bundle of incendiaries. The incendiaries were wrapped together so they could be carried in the bomb bay, but when released, they would separate and scatter over a wider area.

Prior to the war, the Empire of Japan had awarded US service members with "friendship" medals. Five of these were wired to bombs for return to Japan.

The aircraft began arriving over Japan about noon Tokyo time, six hours after launching from the Hornet. They climbed to 1,500 feet and began their bomb runs. Some of the planes encountered light antiaircraft fire and a few enemy fighters. Raiders only had two .50-caliber machine guns in an upper turret and a .30-caliber machine gun in the nose for defense and were able to shoot down three Japanese planes.

When the weapons in the upper turret of one B-25 malfunctioned, the crew dropped their payload early as they came under attack. As the bombers finished their runs, all 16 aircraft were still airborne.

Not All is Lost

After the early launch and longer flight, the planes were running low on fuel. The pilots realized that making it to China might not be possible.

Upon departing Japanese air space, 15 aircraft turned southwest and made their way across the South China Sea. The 16th, piloted by Capt. Edward York, was extremely low on fuel. He did not want to risk his crew by force ditching into the South China Sea. Instead, he made the risky decision to head for the Soviet Union which at the time had a neutrality pact with Japan.

As Doolittle and 14 other bomber crews made their way to China, they ran in many challenges: Not only were they running low on fuel, the weather was taking a turn for the worse and night was fast approaching. If it hadn't been for a strong tail wind increasing their ground speed an extra 25 knots, none of them would have reached the China coastline. As it was, none would reach the intended bases in China, leaving them two options: Either crash land in China or bail out over open water.

Doolittle and his crew parachuted into China, Doolittle landing in a dung heap, which probably saved him from breaking an already injured ankle. Doolittle's crew received assistance from Chinese soldiers and civilians as well as John Birch, an American missionary in China. Other crews received similar assistance at great cost to the local Chinese villagers. During Japanese searches for Doolittle's men, some 10,000 Chinese civilians were murdered for helping the Americans escape.

As Doolittle sat on what was left of his B-25, he felt the raid had been a complete failure: All the aircraft were lost, some of his men were unaccounted for and he expected to be court-martialed when he returned home.

"I was very depressed," Doolittle recalled in a later interview. "Paul Leonard took my picture. He tried to cheer me up. He said, 'What do you think will happen when you go home, Colonel?'

"'Well, I guess they'll send me to Leavenworth,'" Doolittle replied.

Fate of the Missing Raiders

Captain Edward York, who had flown to the Soviet Union, landed at Vozdvizhenka Air Base near the western coast. His plane was confiscated, York and his crew interned as per the neutrality pact with Japan. York and his crew were well-treated, but diplomatic attempts to return them to the United States fell through as the Soviet Union did not want war with Japan. When the Americans were relocated to Ashgabat, near the Iranian border, York managed to bribe a smuggler, who helped them cross the border and reach a nearby British consulate, May 11, 1943.

The smuggling of York and his crew had actually been staged by the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs the predecessor of the KGB according to declassified Soviet archives. Unable to repatriate them legally, helping the Americans escape by smuggler was the only option for the Soviets.

With York and his men held in a Soviet prison and men from the 13 crews that had crash-landed in China accounted for, two crews had bailed out over the South China Sea and were missing. (Corporal Lelan Faktor, assigned to Lt. Robert Gray's crew, was killed during bailout over China.)

The truth of what had happened to the missing Raiders would not be fully known for years.

Bombardier Staff Sgt. William Dieter and flight engineer Sgt. Donald Fitzmaurice, both from Lt. Dean Hallmark's crew, had drowned when their B-25 crashed into the sea.

The Imperial Japanese police captured Hallmark, 1st Lt. Robert Meder, Lt. Chase Nielsen, 1st Lt. William Farrow, Lt. Robert Hite, Lt. George Barr, Cpl. Jacob DeShazer and Sgt. Harold Spatz after they bailed out over the South China Sea.

The United States didn't learn their fate until August 15, 1942, when the Swiss Consulate General in Shanghai sent message that eight crew members were prisoners of the Japanese at the city's police headquarters.

On August 28, 1942, Hallmark, Farrow and Spatz faced a war crimes trial in a Japanese court, alleging they strafed and murdered Japanese civilians. At 4:30 p.m., October 15, 1942, they were taken by truck to Public Cemetery Number 1 and executed by firing squad. The Japanese announced the sentencing four days later. The surviving crewmembers would serve life sentences.

Meder, Nielsen, Hite, Barr and DeShazer were kept in military confinement and put on a starvation diet. Their health deteriorated rapidly. Meder died in Nanking, China, Dec. 1, 1943.

In August 1945, just days after the U.S. dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, American troops arrived at the prison camp and freed the men. By the time they were liberated, Barr was near death and remained in China to recuperate until October. He transferred to Letterman General Hospital, a military hospital in Clinton, Iowa. Barr began to experience severe emotional problems, most likely PTSD. Without proper treatment, he became suicidal and was committed. After Doolittle personally intervened in November, convincing doctors to change Barr's treatment, he eventually recovered.

The true fate of the POWs was revealed in a February 1946 war crimes trial in Shanghai. Four Japanese officers were found guilty of mistreating the eight captured Raiders and sentenced to hard labor. Three served five years and one nine years.

One of those POWs would return to Japan years later.

DeShazer graduated from Seattle Pacific University in 1948 and served as a missionary in Japan for more than 30 years.

Aftermath

When Doolittle returned to the States, he was still under the assumption he would face disciplinary action. But the raid was considered a success, for it had provided a much-needed morale boost.

Doolittle received the Medal of Honor from President Franklin D. Roosevelt at the White House, May 19, 1942, "For conspicuous leadership above and beyond the call of duty, involving personal valor and intrepidity at an extreme hazard to life," his citation read. "With the apparent certainty of being forced to land in enemy territory or to perish at sea, Lt. Col. Doolittle personally led a squadron of Army bombers, manned by volunteer crews, in a highly destructive raid on the Japanese mainland."

Doolittle was also promoted two pay grades to brigadier general.

Sevent-two years after Doolittle received the Medal of Honor, his Raiders were recognized, May 19, 2014, when the United States House of Representatives voted to pass H.R. 1209. The bill would award the Congressional Gold Medal to the Doolittle Raiders for "outstanding heroism, valor, skill, and service to the United States in conducting the bombings of Tokyo."

The award ceremony took place at the Capitol Building, April 15, 2015, with retired Air Force Lt. Gen. John Hudson, the director of the National Museum of the Air Force, accepting the award on behalf of the Doolittle Raiders.

The mission was the first against the Japanese homeland and the longest ever flown in combat by the B-25 Mitchell medium bomber, averaging approximately 2,250 nautical miles. And like the B-25s they once flew, these 80 brave men flew onto the pages of history.

After the raid, the Japanese Imperial Army began the Operation Sei-go. Its goal was purely aimed at preventing the eastern coastal provinces of China from being used again for an attack on Japan. Airfields within an area of 20,000 square miles where the Raiders had landed were rendered unusable. Japanese occupiers used germ warfare and committed other atrocities, and anyone found with American items was shot on sight. About 250,000 Chinese were killed during the Sei-go campaign.

From the late 1940s until 2013, the Doolittle Raiders held an annual reunion almost every year. In a private ceremony during each reunion, the surviving Raiders would perform a roll call and toast their fellow Raiders who had died during the previous year.

Each Raider had a special silver goblet, engraved with his name right side up and upside down. The goblets of those who died were inverted.

In 2013, the last public Doolittle Raiders reunion was held at Fort Walton Beach, Florida, not far from where the crews had trained at Eglin Air Force Base. The goblets are maintained at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio.

Of the 80 Raiders, only Col. Richard Cole remains at 101 years young.

"I was scared," recalled Cole in a 2015 "All Hands" interview. "But I decided there's no sense in trying to second guess and worry about what's going to happen, because it's going to happen anyway.

Read the original post:

Doolittle raid gave America a boost - Nevada Appeal

Posted in Germ Warfare | Comments Off on Doolittle raid gave America a boost – Nevada Appeal

Dalits face oppression across India, says Rahul Gandhi – The Hindu

Posted: at 8:13 am


The Hindu
Dalits face oppression across India, says Rahul Gandhi
The Hindu
The State government has failed on the law and order front. The national government is spreading fear in every section. The poor, Dalits, minorities, farmers are being oppressed through fear. This government listens to only the rich. And this is not ...
No place for poor in country, says Rahul GandhiEconomic Times

all 206 news articles »

Read this article:

Dalits face oppression across India, says Rahul Gandhi - The Hindu

Posted in Government Oppression | Comments Off on Dalits face oppression across India, says Rahul Gandhi – The Hindu

Trump’s weird adherence to this 1980s concept explains his whole presidency – Washington Post

Posted: at 8:13 am

Whats the standard line on President Trump these days? That hes an erratic creature of no fixed commitments and no stable policy objectives? Not so fast. In fact, Trumps entire administration can be understood through the lens of his weird, consistent, unwavering adherence to a 1980s concept of the War on Drugs.

This adherence unifies his policy actions: not only the appointment of drug-war hard-liner Jeff Sessions as attorney general but also his approach to immigration and the wall, his calls for a revival of stop and frisk and law and order policies, key features of the Republican House health-care bill, the bromances with Rodrigo Duterte and Vladimir Putin, and even the initial proposal to defund the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy.

After descending that Trump Tower escalator in July 2015, Trump made headlines when he kicked off his campaign by proclaiming that Mexico was sending us rapists. Less noted has been that he began his list of woes coming from the South by castigating Mexican immigrants for bringing drugs. Already in that speech the solution he offered to this caricatured problem was the wall. Almost two years later, the wall is still meant to solve the problem of drugs, as in this tweet from April: If the wall is not built, which it will be, the drug situation will NEVER be fixed the way it should be!

Trumps well-received joint address to Congress in February also explained his desire to limit immigration by focusing on drugs: Weve defended the borders of other nations while leaving our own borders wide open for anyone to cross and for drugs to pour in at a now unprecedented rate.

No surprise, then, that Sessions has been working steadily, since his confirmation, to restore the building blocks of the War on Drugs that political leaders from both parties have been quietly removing for the past five years. He has ordered a review of federal policies on state legalization of marijuana and appears to be seeking an end to the policy of federal non-interference with the cascade of legalization efforts. He has ordered a review of consent decrees, whose purpose is to spur police reform, and sought to delay the implementation of Baltimores. He has recently handed down guidance requiring federal prosecutors to seek the stiffest possible sentences available for drug offenses.

To support these efforts, Trump has proposed hiring 10,000 immigration officers and 5,000 Border Patrol agents and beefing up support for police departments. According to the White House website, The Trump Administration will be a law and order administration for a country that needs more law enforcement.

The Obama administration had begun to drive toward replacing criminal-justice strategies for drug control with public-health strategies. It wasnt whistling in the dark but following, at least in part, the innovative model of drug control pioneered by Portugal. Marijuana has been legalized there. Use and modest possession of other drugs have been decriminalized, but large-scale trafficking is still criminal. The criminal-justice system focuses on those large-scale traffickers, while public-health strategies and harm-reduction techniques pinpoint users and low-level participants in the drug economy. Adolescent drug use is down, the percentage of users seeking treatment is up, and Portugal is interdicting increased quantities of illegal narcotics.

Countries across Central and South America would like to follow Portugal and transition from a criminal-justice paradigm to an individual and public-health paradigm for drug control. They have advocated for this change at the United Nations but have been blocked by Putins Russia. Indeed, Putin is one of the worlds most steadfast advocates for the 1980s War on Drugs concept.

Of course, Trump has expressed a strange affinity for Putin and also for Duterte, the president of the Philippines. Duterte has called for the slaughter of the Philippines estimated 3 million addicts. The death toll from extrajudicial killings that he seems to have sparked has already reached into the thousands. The response from the United States? Trump praised Duterte for doing an unbelievable job on the drug problem and invited him to the White House.

Yet Trumps initial budget plan involved proposing nearly complete defunding of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, which was founded by congressional legislation in 1988. How does that square?

The Obama administration deployed that office to restore balance to U.S. drug-control efforts, increasing emphasis on treatment, prevention and diversion programs, and fostering a move toward a health-based strategy. The expansion of Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act and requirements that insurers support mental-health and addiction treatment undergirded this effort, supporting the emergence of programs designed to divert low-level drug offenders out of the criminal-justice system and into treatment. This has made for the very promising beginnings of a health-based approach to drug control.

The Trump administration has painted a bulls eye on this new policy strategy and is firing away. While the White House has backed off defunding the Office of National Drug Control Policy, it continues to pursue the reversal of the Medicaid expansion. The administration appears to think narcotics control can be achieved entirely through the tools of criminal justice.

But we tried that in the 1980s, the decade of Miami Vice, the era when the Los Angeles police chief, Daryl Gates, could testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee that casual drug users ought to be taken out and shot. We know where that story ends: with increased incarceration, further degradation of urban neighborhoods, no durable change in rates of drug use and a failure to address addiction.

So, yes, Trump has a vision, and hes moving steadily toward it, wrongheaded though it is, dragging us along with him, as if into a wall.

See the original post here:

Trump's weird adherence to this 1980s concept explains his whole presidency - Washington Post

Posted in War On Drugs | Comments Off on Trump’s weird adherence to this 1980s concept explains his whole presidency – Washington Post

Other view: Wrong direction in ‘War on Drugs’ | Columns | chippewa … – Chippewa Herald

Posted: at 8:13 am

The following editorial was published in the Hackensack (N.J.) Record.

Instead of pressing forward on sensible drug policy that places a premium on addiction treatment and lighter sentencing rules involving low-level, nonviolent drug offenders, U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions is looking to take the nation two steps back to the days of failed policy under the War on Drugs. In effect, Sessions announcement last week on toughening rules for prosecutors considering drug crimes will serve only to return the nation to that dismal, costly trend of mass incarceration, primarily of young black men.

Sessions call for change in prosecuting guidelines, which would include a more robust approach to mandatory minimum sentences, comes at a time when Democrats and Republicans together have proposed alternative sentencing for low-level drug offenders. Gov. Chris Christie, a Republican, has embraced a greater emphasis on treatment, and has been a long-term supporter of drug courts.

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., one of the authors of bipartisan legislation that would seek more lenient sentences for nonviolent drug offenders, wrote an op-ed for CNN this week in which he reiterated his support for Obama-era policies put in place by former Attorney General Eric Holder. Among those were guidelines issued to U.S. attorneys that they refrain from seeking longer sentences for nonviolent drug offenders.

And make no mistake, wrote Paul, the lives of many drug offenders are ruined the day they receive that long sentence the attorney general wants them to have.

Another longtime believer in moving away from strict sentencing guidelines for low-level drug crimes is Sen. Cory Booker, a Democrat who served nearly two terms as mayor of Newark and saw firsthand the devastation mandatory sentencing can have on young black men and their families. Resetting this policy back to the old lock em up mentality last encouraged under the leadership of Attorney General John Ashcroft in the early 2000s would be felt heavily on the streets of Paterson, Newark and Camden.

Piling on mandatory minimum sentences and three strikes, youre out laws on nonviolent offenders did little to stop the illegal drug trade in recent decades, Booker said after reading Sessions rules changes. Instead, it decimated entire communities, most often poor communities and communities of color; resulted in an uneven application of the law; and undermined public trust in the justice system.

As both Paul and Booker point out, mandatory sentencing laws handcuff prosecutors and judges as they approach individual cases, and often send young people to prison for long stretches of time for relatively minor offenses. These arrests, convictions and sentences disproportionately affect African-Americans and their families, and can serve to set the course of their entire lives.

Equal justice advocates are hopeful the energy created by the Sessions announcement will spur members of Congress to move aggressively to address criminal justice reform, including the rollback of mandatory sentences for nonviolent drug crimes. Christie, who has long been on the common-sense side of addiction treatment and has raised the profile of the use of drug courts, could be an important voice on this issue. We encourage him to wholeheartedly join the pushback against this failed tough love approach to drug criminalization the attorney general is pursuing.

Read the original:

Other view: Wrong direction in 'War on Drugs' | Columns | chippewa ... - Chippewa Herald

Posted in War On Drugs | Comments Off on Other view: Wrong direction in ‘War on Drugs’ | Columns | chippewa … – Chippewa Herald

California must resist Jeff Sessions, war on drugs | The Sacramento … – Sacramento Bee (blog)

Posted: at 8:13 am


Sacramento Bee (blog)
California must resist Jeff Sessions, war on drugs | The Sacramento ...
Sacramento Bee (blog)
U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions wants to drag the country back into a war on opioids, which would be bad for California.

and more »

View original post here:

California must resist Jeff Sessions, war on drugs | The Sacramento ... - Sacramento Bee (blog)

Posted in War On Drugs | Comments Off on California must resist Jeff Sessions, war on drugs | The Sacramento … – Sacramento Bee (blog)

Caesars, Exiting Bankruptcy, Seeks Growth Beyond Gambling – Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Posted: at 8:12 am


Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Caesars, Exiting Bankruptcy, Seeks Growth Beyond Gambling
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Caesars Entertainment Corp., one of the most recognizable names in the global casino industry, will emerge from bankruptcy this year after nearly a decade of struggles with debt dating back to the financial crisis. Now it faces a new challenge: How to ...
loveman gary w - SEC.govSEC.gov

all 41 news articles »

Follow this link:

Caesars, Exiting Bankruptcy, Seeks Growth Beyond Gambling - Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Posted in Gambling | Comments Off on Caesars, Exiting Bankruptcy, Seeks Growth Beyond Gambling – Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Gambling Rampant in New Jersey, Rutgers Study Shows – PR Newswire (press release)

Posted: at 8:12 am

"For most people, gambling is recreation," says Lia Nower, the center's director, who led the study."But the more games you play, the more often you gamble and the more venues you frequent, the more likely you are to develop a problem."

Rates of gambling disorder in the general population hover below 2 percent, but are more than 6 percent in New Jersey. Neighboring states offer many gambling venues to New Jerseyans.

Only 5 percent of gamblers in the study reported gambling online, while 75 percent stuck to casinos and other land-based venues. Nineteen percent of gamblers said they gambled both online and at land-based venues. The most popular games were lottery tickets and instant scratch-offs, gaming machines and live casino table games. Nower says online gambling doesn't seem responsible for higher rates of problem gambling.

"The people with the most severe problems are typically those who gamble on activities like slot machines and video poker at casinos and also played casino games online," she says.

Nower and her colleagues were surprised to find that Hispanic adults reported the highest rates of problem gambling of any ethnic group, 16 percent. That was more than eight times the rate in the general population and three times the rate of white adults.

The study also examined the relationship of gambling to daily fantasy sports play, which federal law excludes from gambling prohibitions. Both frequency and severity of gambling in this group were significantly higher than among gamblers in general, the study found.

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/gambling-rampant-in-new-jersey-rutgers-study-shows-300464713.html

SOURCE Rutgers University

http://www.rutgers.edu

Read the original post:

Gambling Rampant in New Jersey, Rutgers Study Shows - PR Newswire (press release)

Posted in Gambling | Comments Off on Gambling Rampant in New Jersey, Rutgers Study Shows – PR Newswire (press release)

Gambia: President Barrow Lifts Jammeh’s Gambling Ban – Jollofnews

Posted: at 8:12 am

The decision is part of the governments plans to transform the Gambia into an attractive hub for investors and to create employment opportunities for youths.

Speaking at the time of the ban, Mr Jammeh said sports betting and gambling dens have in recent years mushroomed all over the country and pupils including seven year-olds often line at kiosks during school hours and spend their lunch money on sports betting tickets. He added that many families now often go hungry because household incomes are wagered in gambling dens

He added that as Gambian society was built on the foundations of promoting positive social values like thrift and integrity rather than negative ones like greed and avarice, it is the duty of his government to safeguard and promote the welfare of his people.

The Gambling industry is one of the highest employers in the Gambia. The industry employs thousands of youths with decent wages and also pays millions in tax to the government.

Go here to see the original:

Gambia: President Barrow Lifts Jammeh's Gambling Ban - Jollofnews

Posted in Gambling | Comments Off on Gambia: President Barrow Lifts Jammeh’s Gambling Ban – Jollofnews

Gambling meets gaming: Contests of skill are a big part of casinos’ future – The Providence Journal

Posted: at 8:12 am

By Wayne ParryThe Associated Press

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. Attracting new customers to interactive experiences is going to be a big part of the future for casinos in the United States and around the world, participants in a major gambling conference predicted Wednesday.

Casino executives, digital experts and payment processors at the conference in Atlantic City agreed casinos need to offer new experiences that directly involve the next generation. This involves new, non-traditional products such as competitive video game contests, skill-based slots, and daily fantasy sports and sports betting in states that allow it.

These would allow casinos to bring in new customers and revenue, the executives and experts said.

"I think all casinos, 10 years from now, will evolve and offer some sort of interactive experiences," said Seth Schorr, chairman of the Downtown Grand casino in Las Vegas.

His casino has gone in big for eSports, the new name for competitive video game contests.

"Young people now consider video games a sport," he said. "It's shocking. It took me a long time to get my head around that. I'm a 40-year-old casino owner who believes in the future of our industry. If I'm not going to take a risk for the future, who is?"

Internet gambling is only offered in three states: New Jersey, by far the largest market; Nevada and Delaware. But other states are considering adding it. On Wednesday, Pennsylvania lawmakers moved a step closer to legalizing online gambling.

A prime opportunity for growth is the expansion of payment processing options for online gambling, said Joe Pappano, senior vice president of the payment processing company Vantiv Entertainment Solutions. Three years ago, when New Jersey offered the first internet bets, credit cards were used for only about 40 percent of transactions involving internet gambling. That figure has now risen to more than 80 percent, he said.

Casinos remain unsure whether daily fantasy sports and sports betting are potential friends or enemies, participants on a panel said.

States across the nation are grappling with how to regulate daily fantasy sports, in which players create a roster of real-life athletes who earn points based on their performances in games.

"Based on public statements from casino executives, there is a desire to see if daily fantasy sports can be added to the mix because of the millennials issue," said Joseph Brennan, CEO of SportAD, a fantasy sports startup firm.

But, he cautioned, it might be difficult to compete with industry leaders like Draft Kings and Fan Duel "that have spent billions of dollars to establish their brands."

Brennan said casinos are perfect partners for daily fantasy sports companies because of the existing player databases and the casinos' knowledge of their customers, their likes and gambling histories.

Sports betting is currently limited to just four states. On Wednesday, Acting U.S. Solicitor General Jeffrey Wall urged the U.S. Supreme Court not to hear New Jersey's appeal of a lower court decision that invalidated the state's sports betting plan.

Melissa Price is senior vice president of Caesars Entertainment, which was first in the nation to deploy skill-based slot machines at its Atlantic City casinos. Unlike traditional slot machines, which are solely dependent on luck, the amount of skill an individual player has can influence whether he or she wins.

"Yes, it's true that there are fewer millennials playing slot machines," she said.

The company removed the 21 machines after six months because they were not generating enough money to cover the vendor fees, she said.

"We all understood that we were learning and experimenting," she said.

But Price said the company remains committed to the concept and plans to deploy new machines when they are available.

Casinos also have to constantly update their offerings and keep up with their customers' interests, said Vahe Baloulian, CEO of BetConstruct, which offers sports betting and online gambling software.

"The time will come when we're saying, 'This generation is not playing on their mobile phones anymore; they're playing on something else we don't know about.'"

Continue reading here:

Gambling meets gaming: Contests of skill are a big part of casinos' future - The Providence Journal

Posted in Gambling | Comments Off on Gambling meets gaming: Contests of skill are a big part of casinos’ future – The Providence Journal

Food, drink, gambling at ‘known speakeasy,’ York cops say – York Daily Record/Sunday News

Posted: at 8:12 am

Three women face charges in connection with operating an alleged speakeasy. Ted Czech, York Daily Record/Sunday News

York City Police raided what they called a "known speakeasy" in the 200 block of South Sherman Street on April 29.(Photo: Ted Czech, York Daily Record/Sunday News)Buy Photo

Three York women face charges in connection with the alleged operation of a speakeasy, where an entrance fee was charged for alcohol, food and gambling,according to charging documents.

Police said they raided the "known speakeasy," located inside a home in the 200 block of South Sherman Street, York, onApril 29, where they cited 33 people for prohibited patronizing and arrested nine on various criminal charges.

In addition, policeseizeddrugs, guns and more than $11,000.

This week, police filed charges against three women:Latricia Ann Thomas, 43, and Paula Faye Thomas, 60, both of the 200 block of South Sherman Street, and Tina Marie Duncan, 49, of the 800 block of West King Street, York.

READ: Newberry police cite drunken couple passed out in road

Documents did not state if the Thomases are related.

All three were arraigned Wednesday. Paula Thomas and Duncan face charges of dealing in procuring unlawful activity/intent to promote and unlawful sale of alcoholic beverages.

No other charging documents related to the other six who were arrested were available Thursday.

Latricia Thomas faces charges ofdealing in procuring unlawful activity/intent to promote, allowing gambling,unlawful acts relative to liquor, alcohol and license, possession or transportation of liquor or alcohol, and unlawful sale of alcoholic beverages, according to the documents.

The womenwere released on their own recognizance at their arraignment and are scheduled for a preliminary arraignment before District Judge Linda Williams on June 27, according to online court dockets.

READ: Loud, drunk man hangs out on Manchester porch, police say

On Thursday, there was no answer at the home police identified as the speakeasy, and the women could not be reached for comment

According to Sgt. James Lynam of the state's Bureau of Liquor Control Enforcement,someone can't just decide to sell things like alcohol.

"You can't sell liquor, alcohol or malt beverages without a license," he said Thursday.

In addition, a casino license must be obtained to run a gambling operation,particularly if a cover is being charged at the door.

"If it's a game among friends, that's fine; however, if you charge an entry fee for a seat at the table where the house benefits, you're facilitating gambling, or in essence, a casino," Lynam said.

Also, the house did not have a food distribution license, according to documents.

Lynam said his bureau was approached by York City Police Officer William Wentz for their help in conducting the raid.

The bureau participated, but as far as specifically how they did so, Lynam declined to say, adding that it was an ongoing investigation.

Police identified Latricia Thomas as the tenant at the home where the speakeasy was operating.

READ: Man in Drunk Lives Matter shirt charged with DUI

Using a search warrant, police went to the home at about 3:45 a.m. Inside, they found crack, heroin, marijuana, five handguns and $11,783, police said.

"Patrons of the speakeasy admitted to being charged a cover charge to enter where in return they received food and drinks and were permitted to gamble," documents state.

Other patrons said they were charged additional amounts of money to buy shots of liquor or containers of malt or brewed beverages, according to documents.

Police spoke with Latricia Thomas, who admitted to charging and collecting money as patrons entered her home, documents state.

Contact Ted Czech at 717-771-2033.

Read or Share this story: http://www.ydr.com/story/news/crime/2017/05/25/food-drink-gambling-known-speakeasy-york-cops-say/343268001/

View post:

Food, drink, gambling at 'known speakeasy,' York cops say - York Daily Record/Sunday News

Posted in Gambling | Comments Off on Food, drink, gambling at ‘known speakeasy,’ York cops say – York Daily Record/Sunday News