James B. Nicholson, Trustee vs. Harmon

(Formerly Woo vs. Harmon)

CV05-00030 DAE KSC

U.S. District Court For the District of Hawaii

Judges: David A. Ezra; Kevin S. Chang

HEARING ON MOTION FOR CONTEMPT OF COURT

DATE: January 16, 2007, 10:30 AM

(Cancelled without notice)

JUDGE: Hon. David Ezra

DEFENDANT’S WITNESS

ELIZABETH DOLE

Address to be determined.

Elizabeth Dole is the Republican Senator from North Carolina

~ ~ ~

New Discovery (03-06-09): Elizabeth Dole is a lobbyist for GlaxoSmithKline which has connections to Barack Obama, the University of Hawaii, Hawaii Biotech, The Global Fund, Dee Jay Mailer, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Mark McConaghy, etc.

December 31, 2008

GlaxoSmithKline spent nearly
$2M lobbying in 3Q

International Business Times

WASHINGTON (AP) - British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline PLC spent nearly $2 million lobbying the U.S. government on patent laws, drug prices and other issues in the third quarter, according to a recent disclosure for lobbyists.

Glaxo lobbied on the budgets for the departments of Labor, Education and Health and Human Services, as well as related agencies, and on bills funding the state Children's Health Insurance Programs. It lobbied on legislation related to drug safety, drugmaker payments to doctors, vaccine supply programs and the law covering industry whistleblowers.

The company is one of the few major makers of vaccines, with about two dozen on the market, including flu shots and several standard children's vaccines against diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus and rotavirus.

Glaxo lobbied against a bill aimed at updating the U.S. patent system. High-tech companies supported the bill that passed the House in 2007, saying it would cut down on frivolous patent-infringement lawsuits. But the pharmaceutical industry has argued it will weaken patent protections on drugs by reducing infringement penalties. The bill stalled in the Senate.

The company also lobbied on related patent protection provisions within free-trade agreements with Peru, Colombia, Panama and South Korea. Lawmakers approved the agreement with Peru late in 2007.

Glaxo and other biotech companies also lobbied on legislation to allow the Food and Drug Administration to approve generic copies of biotech drugs. Generic drug companies already market cheaper versions of regular, chemical drugs, but the FDA does not have the authority to approve copies of biotech drugs, which are more complicated. A handful of generic biotech drugs are now sold in Europe.

Biotech makers opposed a bill that would have made generic biotech medicines medically interchangeable with the originals. Glaxo and others argued generic biotechs should be classified as similar, but not interchangeable. The distinction could potentially save biotech drugmakers billions in lost sales. (...and cost consumers billions MORE in higher drug costs! - CB)

Glaxo lobbied Congress and the Department of Health and Human Services on a proposal that would have allowed the government to negotiate drug prices for seniors in Medicare. Currently, private health insurers negotiate those prices, but that could change under the new Obama administration.

Lobbyists for Glaxo also pushed for an extension of a tax credit designed to reward companies for investing in research and development.

Lobbyists for the company in the July-September period included Jeffrey Ringer, a former legislative aide for Rep. Mary Fallin, R-Okla., Sen. Elizabeth Dole, R-N.C., and former Sen. Conrad Burns, R-Mont., according to a form filed Oct. 20 with the House clerk's office.

http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/20081231/glaxosmithkline-spent-nearly-2m-lobbying-in-3q.htm

See also: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/3/a83/5b7


 

October 11, 2006

The Real Deal Behind Granholm's "U. P. Big Deal"

By C. J. Williams, www.MichNews.com

On January 6, 2005 the Yooper grapevine was abuzz with news of another State of Michigan/Nature Conservancy land grab scheme involving 271,000 acres in eight counties, an amount equivalent to 502 square miles. The parcel had been carved from 390,000 forestland acres situated in ten of the Upper Peninsula’s fifteen counties.

Described by the Conservancy as an ecological treasure trove of nature’s precious jewels and pristine landscapes, the 390,000 acres, once owned by the Bishop Estate Trust (a.k.a. Kamehameha Schools Trust), includes more than 300 lakes and 526 miles of rivers and streams. However, as Paul Harvey would say, it’s time to tell the rest of the story about story about Governor Granholm’s “U. P. Big Deal”, also known as the Nature Conservancy’s “Northern Great Lakes Forest Project”.

Bernice Pauahi Bishop was the great-granddaughter and last direct descendent of Hawaiian King Kamehameha I. Born to high priests, Bernice was raised by a prime minister and educated by Protestant missionaries. While in her teens, she married Charles Bishop, a 28-year old New Yorker.

After her death in 1884, Charles helped establish the Kamehameha Schools and subsequent Bishop Trust according to Bernice’s last will and testament. To do so he used her substantial land holdings and his considerable wealth.

The Bishop Trust, Hawaii’s largest private landowner once estimated to be worth $10 billion or more, still operates schools and educational programs throughout the islands. Over the past several decades, the scandal-ridden Trust has been raided through convoluted schemes that almost defy unraveling.

So how did it come to pass that a Hawaiian trust fund once owned so much of Michigan’s beautiful Upper Peninsula? The answer lies in a purported friendship between Ben Benson and Mark McConaghy, a PricewaterhouseCoopers tax expert hired by the Bishop Estate trustees to keep the IRS off their greedy backs. But, I get ahead of myself.

Some of the 271,000 acres, now lauded as Granholm’s “U.P. Big Deal”, once belonged to the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company. By the late 1960’s, however, C & H could no longer afford to mine copper while meeting all the new environmental standards being put in place. Having to compete with China and other countries, which produce ore with cheap labor while ignoring environmental issues, and facing demands of better pay from its own striking miners in 1968, C & H closed its mines and sold its land holdings to Universal Oil Products.

A similar fate met miners who rode buses for up to an hour or more to the Copper Range mine near White Pine in Ontonagon County. An environmental lawsuit filed in 1995 by the National Wildlife Federation, the Michigan United Conservation Clubs, and others, plus a successful effort to agitate a band of Native Americans over environmental issues, helped end copper’s glory days there, too. But the world’s greatest source of native copper, uranium, gas, oil, and other valuable underground resources still lie waiting in the U.P. and the State of Michigan, the Conservancy, and global mining conglomerates know it.

Ben Benson, a very young New Englander, amassed some of the former C & H property in the late 1980’s, combined it with 292,000 acres purchased in 1990 from Cliff’s Forest Products (Cleveland-Cliffs), added a little bit more from here and there, and set about developing a high-tech, satellite-enhanced timbering operation, or so the tale is told.

According to Maura Singleton’s August 1999 article, “Sea Hawk”, published in the Virginia Business Magazine, 40-year-old Benson had been a dyslexic and indifferent student who dropped out of school in the ninth grade. At age 15, he stole the family car, drove from Cape Cod to Maine, and used a newly obtained credit card to buy 100 acres of rocky wilderness, which he subdivided and sold in 5-acre vacation plots.

Singleton wrote that, at age 17, Benson joined the Navy submarine corps and worked with sonar on a nuclear fast-attack sub, but his plan for a Navy career went by the wayside four years later due to allergies.

By the early 1980’s, Benson, who claimed never to have done anything for more than four years, had already run an oil company and a New Hampshire real estate development company.

He then focused attention on the state of Virginia, marrying the granddaughter of an East Shore developer, an area where the Nature Conservancy (TNC) controlled and mismanaged a great deal of land. It was here that Benson again took up work in real estate, developing exclusive coastline property.

In 1991, Benson, with title to about half-a-million U.P. acres, became involved in a partnership of sorts with the Bishop Estate Trustees through his pal, Mark McConoghy. But, in 1994 at age 35, after surviving two heart attacks within an 8-month period, he sold his U.P. land holdings to the Trust for a few million dollars and bought a 65-foot Hatteras, which he christened “Sea Hawk”.

The partnership may have dissolved, but it later caused Benson’s name to come up in Bobby Harmon’s RICO lawsuit - Civil No. 99-00304 DAE: Harmon v Federal Insurance Company, P & C Insurance Co., Inc., Marsh & McLennan, Inc., Trustees of Kamehameha Schools/Bishop Estate, PricewaterhouseCoopers, et al, filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Hawaii.

Harmon is still immersed in litigation regarding his claims of fraud, tax evasion, racketeering and other wrongful acts involving the Bishop Land Trust. His lengthy witness list, which he adds to almost daily, includes newly appointed U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson who is a former Goldman Sachs CEO. Paulson was also a Board member of the Nature Conservancy and served as co-chairman of its Asia Pacific Council. At one time, the scandal-ridden Bishop Trust owned a great deal of Goldman Sachs stock.

When Benson was featured in the “Sea Hawk” article, he was searching for millions of dollars worth of lost treasure off Virginia’s coast and dueling with Spain for the right to do so. He’s since sold that venture, Sea Hawk, Inc., to wheeler and dealer Peter Knollenberg.

Considering that Benson had been a dyslexic, fifteen-year-old credit card-owning high school dropout and run-away, his estimated fortune, said to be around $110 million several years ago, isn’t too shabby.

After Benson sold his U.P. holdings to the Bishop Trust, Benson Forest Products became known as Munising based Shelter Bay Forests, which managed the trust’s U.P. land holdings with “gentle timbering” technology until the forestland was put up for bids in the fall of 2002.

Although Governor Engler, the Conservancy, and an “undisclosed timber company” formed a “private-public” partnership to bid on the Bishop Trust land, they lost out to Forestland Group LLC, which closed on their deal during the summer of 2003.

Founded in 1995, Forestland Group is a North Carolina based forest investment management organization (TIMO) that purchases property through its various Heartwood Forestland Funds. As of April 2005, Forestland Group owned 560,000 Upper Peninsula acres; 78,110 acres in Houghton and Keweenaw Counties bought from Mead in 1998, 91,117 acres in Iron, Ontonagon, Houghton and Baraga Counties bought from Ned Lake Timber and Land Company in 2001, and the remainder being the former Bishop Trust holdings of 389,202 acres bought in the summer of 2003.

Within a few months of closing on the Bishop Trust deal, Forestland Group offered its prize to the State of Michigan, and by January 2004 the Michigan Chapter of the Nature Conservancy had already secured at least one grant toward the purchase. That’s not surprising, however, considering that a January ‘05 news article written by George Gallagher for the Council of Michigan Foundations lauds several foundations that had taken an active role to help TNC’s Michigan chapter in their then four-year public/private partnership initiative to get their biscuit hooks on the Upper Peninsula Bishop Trust timberland.

Upon learning in 2002 that the public/private partnership lost the bid, Phil Powers, then chairman of the MI-Nature Conservancy, said Forestland Group could fit in with the Conservancy’s goals. “Our sense is they’ve got a first-class track record of putting in place solutions like the ones we’re working on. We in the Nature Conservancy are looking forward to working out a partnership with them,” said Powers.

Tina Hall, the U.P. director of the MI-Nature Conservancy, said the idea of securing recreational access easements to portions of the property was not dead. “…We know the Forestland Group so well, we feel we can work with them,” said Hall.

As the story behind the “U.P. Big Deal” unfolded, it was claimed that key players met at Governor Granholm’s office in November 2003. And, though she had to put the parties in separate rooms when negotiations broke down and shuffle back and forth with offers and counter-offers until she got them to make a deal, an agreement was finally made between the two who’ve been bed partners for years - the State of Michigan and the Nature Conservancy - in tandem with Forestland Group LLC, whose President and CEO is none other than Thomas Massengale, a former Nature Conservancy senior executive and founder of it’s North Carolina Chapter.

Of the 390,000 Bishop Trust acres for which Forestland Group outbid the State, the Nature Conservancy, and their “unnamed” timber company partner, the Conservancy, with multi-billion dollars in tax-exempt assets, will own fee interest (includes mineral rights) in 23,338 acres in the Big Two Hearted River watershed and will manage the State’s conservation easement on 248,000 acres still owned by Forestland Group.

A campaign to fund Granholm’s “U.P. Big Deal” land grab for the Conservancy’s $57.9 million “Northern Great Lakes Forest Project” got underway without anyone asking state citizens if they approved of her Big Deal or not.

Pretty slick, eh!

Copyright by C. J. Williams

Related:

http://www.michigan.gov/gov/0,1607,7-168-23442
_21974-107788--M_2005_1,00.html

http://www.kycbs.net/GUIDE

http://lists.asu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A2=
ind9807&L=sub-arch&T=0&P=1381

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/nation/specials/natureconservancy/

http://www.virginiabusiness.com/magazine/yr1999
/aug99/itsup/cover.html

http://www.nature.org/wherewework/northamerica/
states/michigan/preserves/art17158.html

http://www.nature.org/wherewework/northamerica
/states/michigan/misc/art14792.html

http://www.mass.gov/obcbbo/bd93-042-2.htm

~ ~ ~

www.michnews.com/cgi-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi/318/14384/printer

< END OF QUOTE >

* * * * *

ELIZABETH DOLE COMMITTEE

http://www.nndb.com/org/169/000168662/

* * * * *

Elizabeth Dole is expected to testify regarding her relationships with Robert Dole; Mark McConaghy; Pricewaterhouse LLP; The Nature Conservancy; Ben Benson; Elizabeth Hall; Rocco Sansone; Marsh & McLennan; Henry Paulson; Goldman Sachs; Kamehameha Schools/Bishop Estate; Henry Peters; Matsuo Takabuki; Nathan Aipa; Colleen Wong; Hamilton McCubbin; Dee Jay Mailer; Lyn Anzai; Guido Giacometti; Peter Savio; Faye Kurren, Linda Lingle, Henry Kissinger, Carla Hills, Bill Frist, James Baker, Jack Abramoff, and others to be named upon discovery.

Internet References:


 

VISIT

 THE PEREGRINE GALLERY

To View More Birds of Prey!

JACK ABRAMOFF - HENRY PAULSON - GALE NORTON

FAYE KURREN - NANCY JOHNSON - PETER SAVIO

BRUCE BABBITT - BEN BENSON - DAVID COLE

HAUNANI APOLIONA - JEFF WATANABE

COLBERT MATSUMOTO - JAMES WATT

LINDA LINGLE - JAMES NICHOLSON

 (...with more to come!)

* * * * *

Internet References:

Documents, Letters, News Articles and Related Links

www.kycbs.net/SINNOTT-1-5-97.htm

www.kycbs.net/Claim-KS-Pens-USDOL-8-5-0.htm

www.hillresearch.com/clients.htm

http://starbulletin.com/2000/07/29/news/story2.html

www.kycbs.net/CV05-00030-OUST-6-1-6.htm

www.kycbs.net/Bishop.htm

www.kycbs.net/Catbird1.htm

www.kycbs.net/Confessions.htm

www.kycbs.net/GREED.htm

www.kycbs.net/Lobbyists.htm

www.kycbs.net/NatureConservancy.htm

www.kycbs.net/RedCross.htm

www.kycbs.net/RICO-BH.htm

www.kycbs.net/TheSEC.htm

 

TO GO TO THE WOO VS. HARMON WITNESS INDEX

http://www.kycbs/CV05-00030-Witness-Index.htm