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DealBook: Businesses Are Winning Cat-and-Mouse Tax Game

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 29 Agustus 2014 | 13.07

A pharmaceutical company moved its headquarters to Ireland, sharply reducing its tax rate. A billboard company reclassified itself as a real estate concern, meaning it will no longer pay corporate taxes. And a big oil producer split itself in two, cleaving off a multibillion-dollar division that now operates tax-free.

Across corporate America, companies large and small are finding new ways to address one of the business world's oldest irritations: paying taxes.

By exploiting existing loopholes and devising new ones, some of the country's best-known companies are making it harder than ever for the federal government to replenish its already depleted coffers.

As a result, business income tax revenue remains stagnant at about 2 percent of gross domestic product even as corporate profits hit records.

Business taxes now make up less than 10 percent of federal revenue, and in some years as little as 6.6 percent. That is sharply down from the years after World War II, when about 30 percent of federal revenue came from corporate taxes.

The decline is the result of the rise of untraditional business structures, the effects of a more globalized economy and a labyrinth of subsidies and tax credits. And though the erosion has happened gradually over decades, the surging popularity of inversions — acquisitions of overseas companies that allow American corporations to reincorporate abroad — is raising concerns that an already precarious situation is growing untenable.

"There's been a long, slow, steady decline," said William G. Gale, co-director of the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center and an economic adviser to President George H. W. Bush. "It's a confluence of a bunch of things, and it's increasingly difficult to figure out how to effectively tax corporations."

Lawmakers in Washington are calling for an overhaul of the corporate tax code. Upon becoming chairman of the Senate Finance Committee this year, Senator Ron Wyden, Democrat of Oregon, said it was time to revamp the "dysfunctional, rotting mess of a carcass that we call the tax code." But political gridlock makes the possibility of any quick action all but nonexistent.

While officials may not be in the mood to cooperate, they are taking notice of recent developments. Three tax-avoidance tactics in particular have grabbed the attention of lawmakers and the White House, though the root of the problem runs much deeper.

Photo Senator Ron Wyden, a Democrat of Oregon, has called for an overhaul of the tax code.Credit Mike Theiler/Reuters

Most prominently, the number of inversions is at an all-time high, fueled by a rush of health care companies striking deals for overseas rivals.

AbbVie, which will become one of the 50 largest companies in the world through its $54 billion takeover of the Irish drug maker Shire, became the largest American company to strike an inversion. But more than a dozen other firms have made similar moves, most likely costing the government nearly $20 billion over the next 10 years, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation.

Republicans and Democrats have called for legislation to end inversions, even in the absence of broader corporate tax reform. But the threat of new laws to curb them only seems to be quickening the pace.

"Wall Street is whispering in the ears of all these corporate executives saying, 'Congress might shut this down, you've got to do it now,' " said Rebecca J. Wilkins, senior counsel at the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy.

Another corporate structure being exploited now more than ever is the master limited partnership. These partnerships are part of a broad class of companies known as pass-through entities because they pass all profits along to shareholders and are therefore exempt from paying corporate income taxes.

Dozens of these have been created in the last two years, reducing the Treasury's income by about $1.6 billion annually, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation. Last year, the oil and gas company Phillips 66 spun out its pipeline assets into a master limited partnership, shielding millions of dollars in profits from taxation.

In response to the uptick in master limited partnerships, the Internal Revenue Service temporarily halted new approvals of the structure this year, and the Treasury Department said it was examining the effects on future tax revenue.

Another type of pass-through entity, the real estate investment trust, is also experiencing record popularity. Like master limited partnerships, real estate investment trusts pass profits along to investors, exempting them from corporate taxes.

But loose standards have allowed an ever wider variety of businesses to reclassify themselves as real estate investment trusts, broadening the universe of businesses avoiding taxes altogether. CBS Outdoor, the billboard company, relisted as a REIT this year.

And in a recent ruling, the I.R.S. allowed Windstream, a telecommunications firm, to spin off its underground cables and assorted real estate into a separate publicly traded company. Tax experts believe the ruling opens the door for a new wave of such transactions from a broad range of businesses.

Corporate advisers say that companies are pursuing these structures because, in the face of slow organic growth, executives are looking for additional profits wherever they can find them.

"It's self-help tax reform," said Kyle E. Pomerleau, an economist at the Tax Foundation. "If Congress is not willing to reform the corporate tax code, companies are going to do it for themselves."

Despite the outsize attention in Washington being paid to the tax-avoidance techniques, they represent only a small part of the reason corporate tax revenue has declined so precipitously.

"Inversions are the very small end of the tail," Mr. Gale said. "They just happen to be the part that's wagging right now."

The more fundamental issue is a series of systemic changes to the tax system and the shifting international tax landscape.

Over the years, a growing portion of the United States economy has shifted away from traditional corporations and into lower-taxed structures like partnerships and S-corporations, which are exempt from paying income taxes. This has put a growing swath of the economy beyond the reach of the I.R.S.

"It's gotten much easier to never put money into the corporate sector, or to move it around internationally once it is in the corporate sector," Mr. Gale said.

Only 6 percent of businesses are traditional corporations subject to the corporate income tax, according to the Congressional Research Service. That is down from 17 percent in 1980. The result is that less than half of the government's business income comes from corporations, down from about 80 percent in 1980.

And while most S-corporations are small to midsize businesses, as was intended, some of the country's largest private companies, including Bechtel, one of the country's largest engineering firms, are also organized as S-corporations to avoid corporate income taxes.

"A lot of the income that used to be earned at the corporate level is now being moved to the S-corp level," Mr. Pomerleau said.

And for those traditional corporations that are subject to the United States corporate tax rate, which at 35 percent is the highest in the world, there are myriad ways to avoid paying anything close to that. By taking advantage of a warren of credits, deductions and exemptions, corporations pay an average effective rate of just 12.6 percent, according to the Government Accountability Office.

Much of the tax avoidance comes as multinational corporations take advantage of overseas subsidiaries to shuffle money, intellectual property and assets into lower-taxed jurisdictions. In 2010, a majority of overseas profits reported by American firms were recorded in just 12 low-tax countries like the Netherlands, Bermuda, and Ireland, according to Citizens for Tax Justice.

That skewed distribution of profits is a result of the changed global tax landscape, where many countries have sharply lowered their corporate rates while the United States has not.

Those attractive overseas rates — and the fact that, unlike the United States, other countries do not tax international earnings — are among the reasons that companies are rushing to strike inversion deals.

"We cannot compete with zero," Ms. Wilkins said.

Republicans and Democrats in Congress and the White House all agree the country is overdue for comprehensive tax reform. The last big revision of the tax code came in 1986. Before that, the previous rewrite was in 1954. But ideas on how to proceed vary wildly, diminishing the likelihood of any rapid reforms.

"There's no primitive law of nature that every 30 years they will revise the tax code," Mr. Gale said. "I don't see much in terms of comprehensive tax reform happening with this Congress and this administration. It feels like they're done talking to one another."

A version of this article appears in print on 08/29/2014, on page B1 of the NewYork edition with the headline: Businesses Are Winning Cat-and-Mouse Tax Game .


13.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

ArtsBeat: ‘Breaking Bad’ and ‘Modern Family’ Are Repeat Emmy Winners

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 26 Agustus 2014 | 13.07

Slide Show

The 66th Primetime Emmy Awards, recognizing television's best, took place at the Nokia Theater in Los Angeles on Monday night. "Breaking Bad" and "Modern Family" repeated last year's wins for best drama and comedy, respectively.

Dave Itzkoff and Jon Caramanica of The Times live blogged the ceremony, which was hosted by Seth Meyers and broadcast on NBC.

10:58 P.M. 'Breaking Bad' is Top Drama

O.K., here we go. "Breaking Bad." You called it, Jon.

Well, there you go. Is Jim Parsons in this, too?

And when they erase my earlier prediction, I will have called it, too. I don't think anyone feels the same … resentment as they did about "Modern Family"? Yes, "Breaking Bad" is a repeat winner, but a highly merited one. In its final half-season.

HALF-season. MINI-season. Maybe next year these acceptance speeches will be honored with a Best Variety Show Emmy?

Clearly the achievement the Emmys are most proud of is ending on time. Everything else is incidental.

Early, even! They needed to make room for this Very Intense Katherine Heigl Promo.

Should we do the dignified thing and wrap it up ourselves?

We might end on time, Dave, but we are never the respectable choice.

The nominations seemed to suggest that this would be a change year — "Orange Is the New Black," "House of Cards," "True Detective" — and yet it wasn't. That's about as profound a thought as I can offer.

It feels a lot like the Grammys! In so much as there is an old guard in this world, it won here tonight.

Yes. It says a lot that McConaughey — a newly minted Academy Award winner — would have represented deviation from the norm at the Emmys. Instead his category was won by a homegrown TV star and veteran trophy hoister, Bryan Cranston. It's its own form of presidential politics. You may win the nomination, so to speak, but you've still got to win the general election.

At root, it shows a reluctance on the part of longtime professionals to acknowledge the changes that have been roiling their industry for years, and are going to keep rewriting it in the coming years. Like you said, it's a Chuck Lorre town.

10:51 P.M. 'Modern Family' Is Top Comedy

Jay Leno! They are really trolling Seth Meyers hard tonight.

He made that introduction through clenched teeth. Oh, also, "Modern Family" won something.

Remember when "Modern Family" felt radical? Do you think that, as they're up there, they know how many people think this is a terrible outcome? (And yet, I like most of these actors.)

The series is still a behemoth in so many ways. And massively influential on what's coming down the pipeline this season. It works, and on a network sitcom, that's hard to underestimate. Though they'll still play Steve Levitan off the stage to come out on time.

The "Modern Family" diaspora – write that!

10:45 P.M. Bryan Cranston Is Best Actor for 'Breaking Bad'

"This is horrible." JUST READ THE AWARD, JULIA ROBERTS. Wow. Cranston.

The "Breaking Bad" flush continuing.

Must've been that last-second Julia Roberts jinx. This definitely tips the scale.

Where was JLD to kiss him?

"Even I thought about voting for Matthew," says Cranston.

Also I would have chosen Harrelson over McConaughey, if we're going there.

Even Harrelson conceded he was going to lose to McConaughey — he just didn't know McConaughey was going to lose too. Quite a gracious speech by Cranston, for as many times as he's won previously. Last time he'll get to do it for this role, anyway.

10:38 P.M. Julianna Margulies Is Best Actress for 'Good Wife'

"What a wonderful time for women on television," says Julianna Margulies, a three-time winner now.
Indeed, some outstanding performances in that category.

This was a tough category!

And as Ms. Margulies points out, she's in a network show that has to do a mighty 22 episodes a season. Remember what that used to be like?

Even Margulies is #teamjoshcharles. We are for sure approaching the end of the 22-episode show cycle. How will we be able to tell the difference between a mini-series and a regular show when each of them are three episodes long? I feel like at least some of what we're seeing here is the network folks asserting their (alleged) primacy

How so?

By leaning on established talents on established network shows for big prizes.

The nets have to go home with something, right? Remember when the Emmys started off with a win for Ty Burrell and "Modern Family"? That sure seems like a long time ago.

10:35 P.M. 'Breaking Bad' Wins for Best Writing

Wanna do more Fukunaga material?

I'm workshopping a Khal Drogo bit, will let you know when it's ready. But shh, the Heigl speaks.

"Emmy winner Katherine Heigl" way funnier than anything we've done tonight. So that's two for Janney tonight. And any excuse to hear Joe Morton enunciate is a winner.

It was only ever a question of which "Breaking Bad" episode would win, and not much of a question at that. "Ozymandias" was an episode that some dare say was even superior to the "Breaking Bad" finale, "Felina." I don't think Heisenberg would appreciate their attempt to play her off stage, however.

Well they let the show director have like a four-minute acceptance speech before!

10:30 P.M. 'The' Abby Singer

The "In Memoriam" segment noted the passing of "the" Abby Singer. Why "the"? He was an assistant director, and in showbiz lore, the next-to-last shot of every day's shooting was called the Abby Singer Shot.

Bill Carter

10:29 P.M. Anna Gunn Is Best Supporting Actress for 'Breaking Bad'

Anna Gunn sticks it to no-show Maggie Smith.

Pretty sneaky, sis.

Hope she's enjoying her stay at one of those exotic marigold hotels.

"Breaking Bad" gonna run the table?

You're going to make me go on record, aren't you? I still predict … no. We can erase that if I'm wrong, yes?

LOLOLOLOLOLOLOL.

10:22 P.M. 'True Detective' Wins for Directing

Seth Meyers with that very timely David Caruso burn.

Those "CSI: Miami" bits go over well on Twitter. Much harder in the real world, even if you have a pair of sunglasses.

A big year for Cary Joji Fukunaga's hair.

Cary Joji Fukunaga directed the entire run of "True Detective," so that's got to count for something. I'd give him another trophy if he could explain the whole story to me.

It's woven in his braids!

10:08 P.M. Aaron Paul Is Best Supporting Actor for 'Breaking Bad'

Literally no one can win this category because everyone should win this category.

B-b-b-b-but, what about Josh Charles, victim of the most unlikely TV death in recent memory?

I wonder what one word Aaron Paul could use to express himself in this situation? The classiest meth head to single out his fellow competitors. Cranston should've kissed him, too.

Cranston saving that for his own win.

10:07 P.M. Sofia Vergara as Prop
Photo

Sofia Vergara and Bruce Rosenblum, chairman of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, during the Emmy Awards.Credit Mario Anzuoni/Reuters

This is not at all sexist.

So we are turning the fetishization of Sofia Vergara's body into a comedy routine now? I didn't realize Seth MacFarlane was one of the writers this year.

[High five]

Thanks! Always keep a couple of retrograde-MacFarlane jokes in the chamber.

She should've been standing against a giant screen that said "FEMINIST."

9:56 P.M. 'The Colbert Report' Is Best Variety Series

Please GIF Gwen Stefani, Dave. "The CoBwol Ruhporr."

Congratulations to "Adele Dazeem."

In fairness, Gwen Stefani only watches children's television.

Excellent save by Jimmy Fallon, however. Was that pre-scripted and then re-improvised on the fly?

That's what it looked like, but Gwen really out-improv'd them all! A chair-turning performance!

She needs some work on her … voice.

No doubt.

9:53 P.M. 'Tony Awards' Win Best Direction of Variety Show

This would be the best time for Obama to gatecrash.

Key & Peele! Where is my "Broad City" squad?

Probably en route to a UPS routing station on Staten Island.

Chris Hardwick is here to represent "The Internet." Better him than Daniel Tosh, I suppose.

Billy Eichner ran off with all the good will. The guy directing the Emmys won an Emmy? What a coincidence. A good way to ensure, at least, that the Emmys don't immediately smash-cut to black.

9:46 P.M. Sarah Silverman Wins for Variety Special Writing

Let's just say an interesting moment to follow with Ricky Gervais. Crowd seems to be enjoying his "acceptance speech I would've given" bit. You can never go wrong calling Matt LeBlanc "Joey from Friends" to his face.

I heard it as "Jeremy from Friends" and loved it even more.

And having seen the contents of Sarah Silverman's purse earlier on E!, we know how she's going to celebrate.

First medical marijuana-influenced acceptance speech?

Haha, "medical."

9:40 P.M. 'The Normal Heart' Is Best TV Movie

Amazing to see Ryan Murphy walking Larry Kramer to the stage.

Here is something worth being excited about.

Yes, sometimes it's O.K. to be inevitable.

We have "Glee" to thank for this, natch.

Murphy also acknowledges the superpowers of Erin Brockovich (a.k.a Julia Roberts) and the Incredible Hulk (a.k.a Mark Ruffalo). Not to be underestimated. And a wonderfully inspiring speech from Murphy.

A genuine call to activism that felt slightly less slippery than Miley's last night.

9:33 P.M. 'Fargo' Wins Best Mini-Series

The showdown in that category seemed to be "Fargo" vs. "American Horror Story." "AHS" is grabbing its share of the acting trophies, but "Fargo" clearly getting a warm welcome into the annals of TV from the Television Academy tonight.

Is "Fargo" really a mini-series?

Oh, if only we had time for the epistemology debate on this one . . .

I feel like tonight is full of those debates. All the strategic misalignment of nominees and categories is pretty glaring; more than in past years, I think.

Yes, that victory could definitely set a precedent in terms of campaigning, and even how series get strategized before they debut. If you can structure it like a mini-series, you can nominate it as a mini-series. See you in 2015, I guess?

9:29 P.M. A Musical Interlude From Weird Al

Weird Al! Weird Al with a goatee! He looks intense.

I guess Neil Patrick Harris was busy? Billy Crystal too?

Well, Weird Al is having a moment. To coin a phrase. I like the conceit of writing lyrics for shows with instrumental theme songs.

Was this sponsored by Crackle.com?

Yeah, all that's raising this above a decent viral video is Weird Al's presence in it.

I agree with you, though — sort of a fun parlor game to see what he does with these instrumentals. Or will we later learn that the Emmy writers did all the lyrics and he's just the front?

9:29 P.M. Jessica Lange Wins Best Mini-Series Actress
Photo

Jessica Lange on Monday night accepting the award for Actress in a Mini-Series or TV Movie for "American Horror Story: Coven."Credit Kevin Winter/Getty Images

That house band – oy.

Mixmaster Mike!

Is it???

It is.

Now I feel terrible. But I feel better that Jessica Lange won her Emmy. Bust out the Stevie Nicks in celebration.

Jessica Lange having a very smooth reaction to this victory.

9:09 P.M. Benedict Cumberbatch Wins for 'Sherlock'

I do enjoy seeing Amy Poehler and Seth Meyers vamp, but it's delaying the entrance of McConaughey and Harrelson.

McConaughey just tossed me a beer.

There is a surprising amount of sobriety on that stage right now. I'll just say they're very funny, and even better with a script.

"I'm grateful you had all the plagiarized lines"; did not think Woody Harrelson would beat me to a plagiarism joke tonight, but there you go.
The Emmys are apparently not important enough for two winners to show up to.

I'm just heartbroken we didn't get to see Harrelson, McConaughey and Cumberbatch all in the same place.

Gotta wait for our invite to the GQ Man of the Year party!

9:07 P.M. Martin Freeman Is Best Supporting Actor in Mini-Series

The perennial question: Will we get Stephen Colbert or "Stephen Colbert"?

Or "John Oliver."

This will get a furious 15-minute rebuttal on the next episode of "Last Week Tonight."

Letterman feeling pretty good about his legacy right now, watching this.

Colbert must be so bummed he couldn't personally hand that trophy to Bilbo Baggins himself.

9:00 P.M. Kathy Bates Is Best Supporting Actress, Mini-Series
Photo

Kathy Bates accepting the award for supporting actress in a mini-series "American Horror Story: Coven."Credit Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Another surprise! I thought for sure Julia Louis-Roberts would win. She has "Julia" in her name, it seemed fated. Even Kathy Bates is stunned she won. But she made it fun to root for a character who was quite literally going to hell.

8:57 P.M. 'Sherlock' Wins Best Mini-Series Writing

These SNL-style questions-from-the-audience bits are always reliable, especially when your "audience" includes Melissa McCarthy, Jon Hamm and Jon Hamm's extraordinary beard.

Reliably awful!

I'd be O.K. with two more hours of this.

Man we really have done too many of these, huh? Let's raise the bar.

I just love to see the excitable "Silicon Valley" guys in the background. They seem so happy to be out of the Y-combinator. That was a brutally competitive category. Thought for sure it would go to Larry Kramer. Not Mr. Doctor Who (a.k.a. "Sherlock" producer Steven Moffat).

I thought it would go to the "Luther" writers, though admittedly it's pretty easy to just write [insert Idris Elba smoldering here].

America should be exposed to more Scottish accents. It's good for us.

Also "Treme" more likely to win the Newbery Medal for children's writing, so I wasn't worried about that one

8:48 P.M. 'The Amazing Race' Is Best Reality Competition

Beginning to think that Emmy voters think that by voting for "The Amazing Race," it counts as actual travel.

I just love to hear the name "Bertram Van Munster."

BUT WHO WILL BE BOLD ENOUGH TO VOTE FOR "BIG BROTHER"? Am I still allowed to be aghast at how the Emmys handle reality TV?

To quote "The Simpsons": "It's a victimless crime, like punching someone in the dark."

That's just the sort of attitude that got us here, Dave! Don't just stand idly by – join me in agitating for a better, realer tomorrow.
(Also I stopped watching "The Amazing Race" like four years ago because, seriously?)

8:44 P.M. Julia Louis-Dreyfus Is Best Actress in a Comedy
Photo

Julia Louis-Dreyfus celebrated her best comedy actress win, for "Veep," with a kiss from Bryan Cranston.Credit Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Excuse me, I have to GIF that JLD/Cranston kiss, sorry. Bye. Everyone deserves to be received by Bryan Cranston like that. Julia Louis-Dreyfus in particular, but all of us.

"Veep" approaching phenom velocity of late. JLD is a tremendous, frazzled gift.

If I remember "Superman II" correctly, Julia Louis-Dreyfus has now forgotten all the events of the past year.

8:41 P.M. How's Seth Meyers Doing?

Seth Meyers is this year's Emmy Awards host, following on Neil Patrick Harris and Jimmy Kimmel the previous two years, and Jane Lynch the year before that. How do you think he's doing? Tweet your thoughts about his opening monologue and his jokes using the hashtag #NYTEmmys. We'll collect your views and share them later on the blog.

Michael Roston

8:36 P.M. Jim Parsons Is Best Actor in a Comedy

Cranston will definitely win first prize at the Walt Disney lookalike contest he's attending afterwards.

Need that Louis CK GIF, stat, Dave.

Well, good for that gentle, soft-spoken, wealthy, wealthy, wealthy man, I suppose.

Parsons out here apologizing for his show.

Very touching bit of thanks to his late father, though.

Yes! But! That was a very self-aware speech, aimed at detractors not supporters. History will absolve Jim Parsons, if not his show.

8:34 P.M. Billy and Seth on the Street

Love me some Billy Eichner, but Seth is riding some coattails here.

Billy Eichner is the real host.

Seth is smiling graciously. Best to stand back and let Hurricane Billy do his thing.

At least Tatiana Maslany gets her name dropped.

8:28 P.M. Gail Mancuso Is Best Comedy Director

Here's an actual act of comedy — Gail Mancuso addressing her victory speech for best direction in a comedy series to Matthew McConaughey, both because it's light erotic comedy and so that she doesn't cry. Camila Alves might cut her backstage, though.

8:14 P.M. Slide Show: On the Emmy Red Carpet
Photo

From left, Taylor Schilling in Rauwolf; Amy Poehler in Theia; Kiernan Shipka in Antonio Berardi; and Hayden Panettiere in Lorena Sarbu.Credit From left: Jason Merritt/Getty Images (2); Frazer Harrison/Getty Images; Jason Merritt/Getty Images

More photos …

8:20 P.M. Allison Janney Is Best Supporting Actress, Comedy

Jimmy Kimmel doing a great job of demonstrating why Seth Meyers will live out his years at 12:30.

It did what it was meant to do. Allison Janney a two-time winner in two weeks (she won last weekend for a guest role on "Masters of Sex," too).
Sixth Emmy of her career, I believe.

At least some people watched "Mom!" Or just gave her a pass for all those years on "The West Wing."

It's the show with fewer nude scenes.

But "Mom" is sort of a fascinatingly flawed show — took several episodes to hit a stride, and even then, not really, but from a subject matter perspective, was unusually raw for CBS.

Forget it, Jon. It's Chuck Lorre town.

#teamgalecki over there, huh?

8:17 P.M. Louis CK Wins Comedy Writing Award

Missed opportunity to have Allison Williams fly onto the stage. (She can do that in real life you know.) And here. Come. The. Thinkpieces.

This is the Miley moment of the 2014 Emmys.

8:10 P.M. Ty Burrell Is Best Comedy Supporting Actor

I will say I got genuinely psyched out when Seth Meyers introduced "Beyoncé." Not quite so surprised that the first award of the night goes to "Modern Family."

All that voiceover-spokesperson work is really paying off for Ty Burrell. Would always love to see Andre Braugher win but I'm not convinced what he does on that show counts as comedy. It's more like site-specific performance art.

This is looking like a promising night for adults who talk like "The Internet."

What does Tony Hale talk like? The CB radio?

8:00 P.M. Seth Meyers Kicks Off the Show

A "Mad Men" spoiler before the curtain has even gone up. And an appearance by "Masters of Sex's" Ulysses. Bodes well.

Man, the 1986 Emmys are getting off to a bracing start.

"This year we're doing the show on a Monday night in August, which, if I understand television, means the Emmys are about to be canceled." This is the Seth Meyers I came for. No big production number (as of yet), just right into Meyers's monologue. Very ESPYs.

Except that the ESPYs are funny. This is great humor for fans of mid-2000s CBS.

"That's right, kids, Jesse Pinkman lived, Dexter lived, 'Your Mother' didn't make it. Sleep tight."

O.K., O.K. a very sharp Jim Parsons joke; some is forgiven.

Send your complaints about spoilers to Seth Meyers ℅ 30 Rockefeller Plaza.

Seth thinks he's hosting the annual Broadcasting & Cable exec roast.

I like the subtle snark. Not missing the padded-out song-and-dance routines. But give me something to meme already.

7:54 P.M. On the Red Carpet: Kerry Washington
Photo

Credit John Shearer/Invision for The Television Academy

7:28 P.M. Here Come the Emmys

Jon, I can't believe you're here after last night's marathon MTV Video Music Awards. You have the endurance of a young Adam Levine.

Adam Levine's not young? All that vampirism really is a blessing, huh?

While I don't expect a moment tonight on the order of Blue Ivy's "Good job, Mommy," I am provisionally excited for these Emmy Awards. It's a Seth Meyers, "True Detective," "Orange Is the New Black" kind of night. That's enough to look forward to.

I enjoy maybe 1.5 of those 3 things, so maybe I will be having less fun than you tonight. I will try to keep spirits high, though.

Any competitions you're looking forward to? Are you counting the minutes until the epic McConaughey/Harrelson/Cranston/Spacey bro-down?

I suppose I am looking forward to people freaking out if and when "The Big Bang Theory" beats "Louie."

You are a cynic in the classic Greek sense. Perhaps a Julia Louis-Dreyfus or Amy Poehler victory will turn that frown upside down.

#teamjoshcharles. If Nic Pizzolatto wins, will his acceptance speech just be a list of footnotes and attributions?

It would be pretty rad if they just announced the #TrueDetectiveSeason2 cast from the Emmys stage. And it's Tina Fey and Amy Poehler.

Dave, you are excited about Seth Meyers, yes?

I am!

I'm so sorry. He just said on the red carpet not to expect jabs at individual shows or actors, only thematic comedy about, you know, the state of television. He's a card, that guy.

Oh, well maybe he was doing it in the guise of one of his many SNL characters.

7:02 P.M. Emmys vs. Video Music Awards: Readers Respond

With the Primetime Emmys and MTV Video Music Awards broadcast on successive nights this year, we asked readers to tell us which show they think is more important. Do the MTV awards, now in their 31st year, distill what's big in popular culture? Or do the Emmys better define the entertainment that we consume by crowning the best of what some say is a new golden age of television?

Several Times readers responding came down on the side of the Emmys.

One reader captured the fleeting nature of youth in describing why she thinks the Emmys are more culturally relevant:

. #NYTEmmys, I'm 50 with many friends 27-29yo. The younguns think they've aged out of the #VMA2014.

— diana biederman (@dianauws) 25 Aug 14

And other readers were more stark about how age factors into the way they see the MTV awards:

Millennial trash vs Gen X class? I'll take the Emmys #NYTEmmys The only thing I see coming out of the VMAs is the fall of our empire.

— Pete the Cat (@PeteTheCat) 25 Aug 14

Favorite TV shows were also cited as reasons that the Emmys were more important:

Answer: Battleship on FX. RT @nytimesarts: Which matters more: The Emmy Awards or the VMAs? Tell us with #NYTEmmys http://t.co/xO85WuqupX

— Michael Martinez (@MikeMartinezDC) 25 Aug 14

But the age factor also came up as a reason both the Video Music and Emmy Awards offer up useful cultural signposts:

#nytemmys vma young emmy old! both relevant

— igwos (@igwos_) 25 Aug 14

Then again, some Twitter users thought we were asking the wrong question:

Or which matters less "@nytimesarts: Which matters more: The Emmy Awards or the VMAs? Tell us with #NYTEmmys http://t.co/7oJkhAgV1f"

— Cathleen Carr (@Cathleen_Carr) 25 Aug 14

@nytimesarts #NYTEmmys yawn. VMA yawn. Reading a good book or playing with the kids is a better way to spend your precious time.

— MEGumerson (@Farmagedddon) 25 Aug 14

Do you disagree? Keep the discussion going using the hashtag #NYTEmmys.

Michael Roston

7:00 P.M. On the Red Carpet: Todd Spiewak and Jim Parsons
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Credit John Shearer/Invision for The Television Academy

6:58 P.M. On the Red Carpet: Taylor Schilling
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Credit Frederic J Brown/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

6:55 P.M. On the Red Carpet: Laverne Cox
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Credit Frederic J Brown/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

6:53 P.M. On the Red Carpet: Peter Dinklage
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Credit John Shearer/Invision for The Television Academy

6:49 P.M. On the Red Carpet: Alexi Ashe and Seth Meyers
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Credit Frederic J Brown/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

6:48 P.M. On the Red Carpet: Lena Dunham
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Credit John Shearer/Invision, via Invision For The Television Academy

6:46 P.M. On the Red Carpet: Hayden Panettiere
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Credit Mark Ralston/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

6:45 P.M. On the Red Carpet: Christina Hendricks
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Credit John Shearer/Invision for The Television Academy

5:21 P.M. Ginger Beard Detailing, People With Field in Names

A brief survey of how various television stars are preparing for the Emmy Awards:

Beauties getting ready to hit the road on the way to the red carpet! #OITNB #Emmys http://t.co/6X2mI3yYLJ

— Orange Is the New… (@OITNB) 25 Aug 14

Instead of prepping for #Emmys I'm prepping for bed in Romania. #BeingBenFranklin Best o luck to @BreakingBad_AMC miss you dearly

— dean norris (@deanjnorris) 25 Aug 14

At fancy party with fancy people @nathanfielder @iamgreenfield #Emmys2014 #peoplewithfieldinname http://t.co/FSpBC19C9n

— Julia Louis-Dreyfus (@OfficialJLD) 25 Aug 14

If Silicon Valley loses, you'll see me tweet a very sincere seeming congrats to the winning show. Don't believe me. I won't mean it. #Emmys

— Kumail Nanjiani (@kumailn) 25 Aug 14

Just used some fake tan that I got free in a goody bag. It successfully turned the grey bits of my beard ginger. Perfect. #Emmys2014

— Ricky Gervais (@rickygervais) 23 Aug 14

4:27 P.M. Which Matters More? The VMAs or the Emmys?

Which awards show is more culturally relevant in 2014? The Primetime Emmy Awards or the MTV Video Music Awards? We'd like to hear the opinions of Times readers. You can share yours with us using the hashtag #NYTEmmys on Twitter, or write them in the comments here.

Quirks of the calendar put the VMAs and the Emmys on back-to-back nights this year. While there may be some overlaps in audience, the two awards shows celebrate two very distinct forms of entertainment. And so we invite readers to debate this question based on articles written in the past day by Emily Steel, a Times media reporter, and Jon Caramanica, a music critic.

In her preview of tonight's Emmys broadcast, Ms. Steel describes how the Emmys, once a celebration of an entertainment industry backwater, have gained luster. She writes that "as traditional and digital networks ramp up their original productions and attract some of the biggest stars in Hollywood, the Emmys are soaring to new levels of artistic — and for some networks, financial — importance."

In his review of last night's VMAs, Mr. Caramanica examined the show in its 31st year and MTV's diminished role in spreading popular culture. He writes that the VMAs were "dominated by a class of relative newborns who, just a year ago, were barely famous enough to be in the building to watch Miley Cyrus scandalize a nation."

What do you think? Do the VMAs continue to serve as a vanguard in popular culture? Or are the shows, performers and producers of the television programs celebrated at the Emmys more relevant to what entertains us as a culture today? Share your opinions on Twitter and we'll gather some of your perspectives here on the blog ahead of the Emmys broadcast tonight.

Michael Roston

3:35 P.M. Forget the Academy; Here Are Your Picks
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"Bob's Burgers" on Fox won the Emmy for best animated program. It was a favorite among Times readers, as well.Credit Fox

Observers have been known to complain that the Emmys recycle the same nominees year after year, making room for only a few newbies at a time. So in advance of tonight's ceremony on NBC, we asked you to tell us who you would have nominated, TV Academy rules and industry pets be damned. Some agreed with the official list of contenders, but many others put forward completely different suggestions. And while we didn't bring in PricewaterhouseCoopers to tabulate anything, there was a clear reader favorite: "Bob's Burgers" on Fox.

A few Emmy Awards were handed out on Aug. 16, and "Bob's Burgers" did actually win for best animated program, just as our readers called it:

"Bob's Burgers" should win this award in a landslide vote.
— Mitchell, Haddon Heights, N.J.

Hands down, "Bob's Burgers" (or anything with Kristen Schaal), followed closely by "Futurama." "South Park" has to be in there somewhere, because it sometimes operates on an entirely different plane. It is often so funny that laughter seems to be an inadequate response.
— gemli, Boston

But one voter went even further, nominating it for best comedy:

In an ideal world, "Bob's Burgers" or "Brooklyn Nine-Nine." In real life, "Silicon Valley." (But honestly, I'd take ANYTHING over "Big Bang Theory" or "Modern Family.")
— Lizbeth, N.Y.

Speaking of best comedy, shows that weren't really eligible like "Inside Amy Schumer" and "Key and Peele" (technically considered variety shows) received shout-outs, as did a few cult favorites and at least one not-at-all eligible show:

Why no mention of "Episodes?" I still don't get "Modern Family" or "Big Bang Theory." I don't give them any nomination.
— Uniack, Woodside, NY

I've been watching "Silicon Valley," which I enjoy but don't really understand. Just shows that when something's funny, it's funny.
— Emily Emirac, New York City

"The Mindy Project." Period.
— Rick L., NYC

Of those that were nominated, I'd have to go with "Louie" as well. But, for what makes me laugh at least once daily, it's still "Seinfeld."
— Alan Chaprack, New York, NY

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Matt LeBlanc, left, and Stephen Mangan in "Episodes" on Showtime.Credit Des Willie/Showtime

As for comedy performers, readers would have given Matt LeBlanc, the "Episodes" star, some love, and one wondered why a different "Big Bang Theory" star wasn't nominated:

I was very happy to see Jim Parsons win the first time, but since then I don't see that he has actually done much more with the character. That's not really a criticism of him, but I don't see the point of repeatedly rewarding someone for giving the same performance. It's also a shame that his co-star Johnny Galecki doesn't get some recognition.
— Jim, Boston

For lead actress in a comedy, Mindy Kaling of "The Mindy Project" was mentioned, but most readers preferred the TV Academy's contenders, including Taylor Schilling of "Orange Is the New Black" and especially Julia Louis-Dreyfus, who is nominated for "Veep":

She is the smartest, funniest actress working in television today. She carries her show like no other actress in her category. The bathroom scene in the final episode of this past season between her character, Selena, and Tony Hale, as Gary, was so brilliant, and had me in tears — I was laughing so hard.
— Ken L., New Jersey

On the drama side of the ledger, "The Killing," "The Good Wife," "Fargo" and "The Americans" each had their partisans. Surprisingly, "Game of Thrones" and "Downton Abbey" did not have a lot of defenders. So, at least among readers, the race comes down to two favorites. We'll let the readers make their cases:

"TRUE DETECTIVE"! "TRUE DETECTIVE"! "TRUE DETECTIVE"!
— Regular Meg, PA

If there were kind justice for this year's Emmys, every individual involved with the final episodes of "Breaking Bad" — in front of and behind the camera — would receive an Emmy. All other eligible categories would be temporarily changed to Best ___________ Not in "Breaking Bad."
— JR, Chicago, IL

Among drama actresses, several names were mentioned, including the nominated Julianna Margulies of "The Good Wife" and the snubbed Keri Russell of "The Americans." Several argued in favor of the overlooked Mireille Enos of "The Killing":

Ms. Enos is as good as anyone working today in films and TV. I will miss her (and Joel Kinnaman) as the most compelling cop partners that I can recall and I am 64.
— David Izzo, Durham, NC

And Lizzy Caplan, who is up for "Masters of Sex" tonight, had her partisans:

She is the force around which all else and everyone else in "Masters of Sex" revolves.
— Momus, Out west

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Tatiana Maslany, center, in "Orphan Black" on BBC America.Credit Steve Wilkie/BBC AMERICA, via Associated Press

But one name ruled them all:

Tatiana Maslany, "Orphan Black," BBC America — six nominations? For each character she plays.
— Rolf Rykken, Washington, D.C.

Is there no degree of difficulty in acting, like Olympic diving or skating? Tatiana Maslany plays many different characters who are identical genetically and tints each one with the colors of different nurturing. Not hard enough? She then plays one of those character imitating another of those characters and creates a third character in between the two.
— William, Werick

Finally, for lead actor in a drama, a few readers spoke up in favor of three nominees — Jon Hamm of "Mad Men," Woody Harrelson of "True Detective" and Jeff Daniels of "The Newsroom." Many hearts and minds were with these overlooked stars:

Matthew Rhys in "The Americans" would get my vote without a doubt. Great show, great acting. But like "The Wire" and "Friday Night Lights," it's been ignored. You're in good company, show!
— Lainie, Lost Highway

Oh — there's just something about shamblin' Joel Kinnaman in "The Killing." What a delight. He would get my vote hands down.
— TL, NYC

But the overwhelming sentiment was with a not-exactly-overlooked actor, Peter Dinklage of "Game of Thrones." He is up for best supporting actor, which is the wrong category if you ask our readers:

Wow was Peter Dinklage really not nominated for best actor? What a joke.
— Donald Quixote, NY, NY

Peter Dinklage. Nomination or not (and he certainly IS the heart of "Game of Thrones"), I give him my own personal Emmy.
— sashakl, NYC

Stephanie Goodman


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Fashion at the 2014 Emmys

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DealBook: Burger King in Talks to Buy Tim Hortons

Written By Unknown on Senin, 25 Agustus 2014 | 13.07

Burger King may be the home of the Whopper, but Canada may be the new home of Burger King.

The restaurant operator said on Sunday that it was in talks to buy Tim Hortons, the Canadian doughnut-and-coffee chain, in a potential deal that would create one of the world's biggest fast-food businesses.

If completed, the deal would mean the burger giant's corporate headquarters would move to Canada, raising the specter of yet another American company switching its national citizenship to lower its tax bill.

Under the expected terms of the deal, Burger King would create a new corporate parent that would house both chains, which would be operated independently. Together, the two companies would have a market value of more than $18 billion.

An agreement could be reached as soon as this week, a person briefed on the matter said.

Though the two companies are expected to argue that a merger would bring a host of strategic benefits, it would nevertheless count as a so-called corporate inversion. Many American companies have looked toward taking over foreign companies, and then moving their headquarters abroad, to lower their overall tax bill.

Inversions have become increasingly popular, though the practice has come under fire from Washington as the Obama administration and lawmakers have complained that companies that do so are unfairly — though legally — cutting their tax bills. The practice gained new prominence when Pfizer, one of the biggest names in corporate America, pursued a takeover of AstraZeneca in an effort to find a lower tax rate in Britain.

Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew recently said that the White House was weighing whether to take a harder line on inversions and that it had already identified potential ways in which it could block the corporate tax flight without having to rely on Congress to pass legislation.

Though most of the companies that have used inversions are big drug makers like AbbVie, which makes the arthritis drug Humira but isn't a household name, Burger King would be one that is highly visible to consumers. A company in a similar position, the pharmacy chain Walgreen, cited potential pressure from Main Street and Washington as a factor in forgoing a corporate relocation.

The American corporate tax rate is about 35 percent, while Canada's is about 15 percent. But people briefed on the deal negotiations said that the main driver in the talks was not taxes. Burger King already pays a tax rate of roughly 27 percent, and would shave off only a couple of percentage points by moving to Canada, according to the people briefed on the matter.

And Burger King does not have a significant amount of cash held abroad, these people said. Companies often pursue inversions to gain access to their overseas cash without being hit by a big American tax bill.

One potential reason for the move may be to placate Canadian authorities. Deals in the country are governed by the Investment Canada Act, which allows the national government to block a merger if it is deemed to not be in the best interests of the country.

Given Tim Hortons' status as one of the country's iconic restaurants, a merger structure would allow it to remain Canadian. (The company was previously owned by Wendy's, until it was spun off in 2006.)

The two companies are expected to argue that the deal makes sense because it would create a stronger competitor to McDonald's and Yum Brands, the owner of Taco Bell and KFC. The combined restaurant operator would have about $22 billion in revenue and more than 18,000 restaurants worldwide.

Uniting Burger King and Tim Hortons would allow the company to grow faster worldwide, while creating a restaurant operator whose offerings span breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks.

Coffee may be an especially important attraction for Burger King and its majority owner, the Brazilian investment firm 3G Capital. In Tim Hortons, Burger King would be getting a restaurant chain that is essentially synonymous with coffee in Canada.

As it marks its 50th year, Tim Hortons can claim a penetration into the Canadian fast-food market with few parallels. On a per capita basis, its 3,630 outlets in Canada would be about 36,000 shops in the United States, just over double the 14,700 McDonald's has in its home market.

A takeover of Tim Hortons would be the latest twist in the 60-year-old life of Burger King. Started as a burger joint in Florida, it became a rival to McDonald's. But it has never surpassed its rival, even after being taken over and reworked by private-equity investors multiple times.

Four years ago, 3G Capital bought control of the fast-food chain for $4 billion, focusing on a relentless cost-cutting initiative to help fix its troubled operations. It then brought Burger King back to the public markets two years ago by merging it with a publicly traded investment firm.

The company operates more than 13,000 locations, almost all of which are run by franchisees.

A version of this article appears in print on 08/25/2014, on page B1 of the NewYork edition with the headline: Burger King In Talks to Buy Tim Hortons.


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DealBook: Bank of America’s $16 Billion Mortgage Settlement Less Painful Than It Looks

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 22 Agustus 2014 | 13.07

Credit Lauren Victoria Burke/Associated Press

The Justice Department said on Thursday that it had so far recovered nearly $37 billion from big banks for their role in selling shoddy mortgages before the financial crisis.

Such a large number — intended to deter misdeeds in the future — suggests that Wall Street is being made to pay for its role in stoking the subprime debacle. Yet the financial pain inflicted by the settlements may not be as great in the end.

Take the latest, and largest, mortgage settlement. Bank of America has agreed to a $16.65 billion deal with federal and state authorities. The actual financial burden for Bank of America, however, may not exceed $12 billion — certainly a large amount, but one significantly less than the number the government trumpets.

At issue is how much of the cost of the $7 billion in "soft dollars," or help for borrowers, the bank will bear under the settlement. Some of the relief the bank will provide involves cutting the principal of a loan to make it easier for the borrower to pay. The dollar amount of that reduction gets credited toward what it needs to fulfill the settlement. But Bank of America wrote down many of its troubled mortgages years ago. And investment firms, not Bank of America, may now own some of the loans that get written down, potentially shielding the bank from a financial hit.

"The real financial cost to the bank could be considerably lower," said Laurie Goodman, a specialist in housing at the Urban Institute. "This is helping consumers, but it may not be costing the bank."

The actual pain to the bank could also be significantly reduced by tax deductions. Tax analysts, for instance, estimate that Bank of America could derive $1.6 billion of tax savings on the $4.63 billion of payments to the states and some federal agencies under the settlement. Shares of Bank of America jumped 4 percent on Thursday, suggesting investors believe that the bank could take the settlement in stride.

"The American public is expecting the Justice Department to hold the banks accountable for its misdeeds in the mortgage meltdown," said Phineas Baxandall, an analyst with the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, a consumer advocacy organization. "But these tax write-offs shift the burden back onto taxpayers and send the wrong message by treating parts of the settlement as an ordinary business expense."

Still, government authorities, in announcing the settlement on Thursday, put emphasis on the aid that will come to borrowers. Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. led a news conference that was attended by such a large group of investigators from around the country that there was masking tape on the stage to show them where to stand.

"This historic resolution — the largest such settlement on record — goes far beyond 'the cost of doing business,' " Mr. Holder said.

The Justice Department had already forged huge mortgage deals with JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup, but in certain ways, the Bank of America accord is shaping up into the showpiece for the Obama administration. Some consumer advocates said that while the deal was flawed in many ways, it provided more relief than the other settlements.

"It is better than previous settlements because it offers more principal reductions, more money for blighted areas and more money for new mortgages to low- and moderate-income home buyers," said Bruce Marks, founder of the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America.

Photo Angelo Mozilo was chief executive of Countrywide Financial.Credit Lucas Jackson/Reuters

And in contrast to the other deals, law enforcement authorities are weighing whether to sue bank executives, including Angelo Mozilo, the co-founder and former chief executive of Countrywide Financial, the mortgage giant that Bank of America bought in 2008.

The consumer relief is expected to help tens of thousands of homeowners across the country. Most notably, the deal could result in Bank of America forgiving billions of dollars in mortgage principal. Unlike the other settlements, a person briefed on the matter said, the Bank of America plan could involve cutting the principal on loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration, a move that will primarily help low- and moderate-income borrowers.

With six years having passed since the depths of the housing crisis, however, many homeowners with Countrywide loans have already lost their homes in foreclosure.

The Justice Department and the state attorneys general who negotiated the settlement were creative with their relief measures. In New York State, for example, Bank of America has agreed to donate hundreds of foreclosed properties to land banks and community groups, while chipping in money to renovate each property.

Credit Richard Drew/Associated Press

Such measures are also popular with politicians. Bank of America agreed to finance affordable rental housing, a top priority for city and state leaders, particularly Democrats, like Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York, who called the deal "historic."

Bank of America has also agreed to pay as much as $490 million to homeowners who face larger tax bills after their mortgages are modified. Such debt relief may be taxable for the homeowner.

Nonetheless, the punishment for the banks may be considerably lighter than it looks. The consumer relief is where the mismatch between headline settlement figures and actual costs occurs.

As part of the deals, banks can modify loans that they still hold in order to help struggling borrowers. But such modifications may not require any new financial sacrifice on the part of the bank. Indeed, on Thursday, analysts with Moody's Investors Service wrote, "most of the cost of homeowner relief is already incorporated into existing loan-loss reserves."

The mortgage settlements may prompt protests from the large investment firms that bought the bonds that are backed with faulty mortgages.

Many loans owned by the investors through such bonds could get modified under the settlements, causing a hit for the investors but not the banks. The investors note that the government promotes the settlements as punishment for dumping faulty loans on investors, but it devises deals that saddle investors with some of the costs. Further chafing the investors is the potential credit the banks get for modifications to the investors' loans to meet the dollar requirements of the settlements.

"I don't want the banks getting credit for taking my money," said Vincent A. Fiorillo of DoubleLine Capital, an investment firm that holds mortgage-backed securities. "It's very frustrating."

Citigroup expects to meet its consumer relief requirements by adjusting mortgages it owns, according to Mark Costiglio, a spokesman for the bank. Dan Frahm, a spokesman for Bank of America, said it planned for the "majority" of its modifications to be on loans that it owns. JPMorgan declined to comment on where the breakdown of its modifications might occur.

Some housing analysts say that the settlements need to include a significant amount of investors' loans, so that a meaningful number of borrowers get relief. In response, the investors say that they support modifications and ask why the big banks have had to be prompted by the settlements to do them.

"If you feel you can do a modification on a loan that belongs to an investor, then by all means do it," Mr. Fiorillo said. "But don't get credit for it."

Matt Apuzzo contributed reporting.

A version of this article appears in print on 08/22/2014, on page A1 of the NewYork edition with the headline: Settling for $16 Billion, Bank Knows It Will Pay Much Less.


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DealBook: $16.65 Billion Mortgage Settlement Nears for Bank of America

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 21 Agustus 2014 | 13.07

Photo Brian T. Moynihan, the chief of Bank of America. He spoke on the phone with Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr.Credit Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

The Justice Department is poised to announce a $16.65 billion settlement with Bank of America over accusations that it duped investors into buying toxic mortgage securities, say people briefed on the matter — the single largest government settlement by a company in American history.

Yet even as that accord nears completion, prosecutors are preparing a separate civil case against Angelo Mozilo, the man who came to embody the risk-taking for which Bank of America is now paying dearly, a rare move against a senior executive at the center of the financial crisis.

The Bank of America settlement will be a coda to a painful period for the bank and the broader financial industry. More than any other Wall Street giant, Bank of America was the source of the toxic subprime loans that helped ignite the crisis — the result of its acquisitions of Merrill Lynch and Mr. Mozilo's Countrywide Financial. The size and scope of the expected settlement, which could be announced as soon as Thursday, reflects the extent of the damage.

The deal would resolve more than two dozen investigations from prosecutors across the country, the people briefed on the matter said, including Manhattan, Brooklyn, Los Angeles, New Jersey and North Carolina. To settle those varied investigations, some of which have not been previously reported, the bank is expected to pay a $9.6 billion cash penalty and $7 billion in so-called soft-dollar payments to aid struggling consumers. In turn, the Justice Department will forgo any potential cases against the bank over collateralized debt obligations, one of the people said, complex financial instruments the bank sold in the years before the crisis.

Photo Angelo Mozilo was chief executive of Countrywide Financial.Credit Lucas Jackson/Reuters

While no bank executives will face charges as part of the settlement, the people said, the prosecutors in Los Angeles are preparing a lawsuit against Mr. Mozilo, Countrywide's co-founder. Mr. Mozilo, who previously reached a $67.5 million settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission, was an early target of the Justice Department.

In 2011, the United States attorney's office in Los Angeles decided not to file criminal charges against Mr. Mozilo. But in recent months, the office's civil division has turned the spotlight back on Mr. Mozilo, whose company originated mortgages that went to people with little income to repay them, causing devastating losses for investors who bought the loans.

But a complication has emerged: Mr. Mozilo's lawyers have cautioned the prosecutors in Los Angeles that their client has a serious illness. The prosecutors have sought Mr. Mozilo's health records, the people said, though for now the case remains on track.

In a statement, Mr. Mozilo's lawyer, David Siegel, said that he would "not comment on reported rumors concerning any investigation." He added, however, that "there is no sound or fair basis, in law or fact, to pursue any claim against Angelo Mozilo. This story has gone on more than long enough; Mr. Mozilo stands virtually alone among banking and mortgage executives to actually have been pursued by this government and already paid a record penalty" to the S.E.C.

Bloomberg News earlier reported the plans to file a lawsuit.

The persistent focus on Mr. Mozilo, 75, stems from Countrywide's outsize role in the mortgage crisis.

The son of a Bronx butcher, Mr. Mozilo amassed great wealth as Countrywide became the nation's largest mortgage lender. After Bank of America bought the company in 2008, the decision ultimately set off years of legal woes. In some cases, Bank of America has argued that it did not assume legal liabilities stemming from many of the loans Countrywide made before the acquisition. In all, the bank has paid more than $50 billion to settle mortgage issues with investors and various government agencies.

The $16.65 billion settlement expected on Thursday is the culmination of that reckoning.

It has been years in the making. Across the country, United States attorney offices have slowly mounted investigations into Countrywide, Merrill and Bank of America itself.

Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, has at least two investigations based on whistle-blower lawsuits, the people briefed on the matter said. Those investigations will be included in the settlement.

His counterpart in Brooklyn, Loretta E. Lynch, has a separate investigation. Paul J. Fishman, the United States attorney in New Jersey, does, too.

The settlement, while wrapping in all those potential cases, would also put to rest another mortgage-related lawsuit that the Justice Department filed last summer in North Carolina. A number of states, including California and New York, will take part in the settlement as well.

The Los Angeles prosecutors, while focusing on Mr. Mozilo, also built an investigation into Countrywide. The acting United States attorney there flew to Washington on Wednesday in preparation for a potential news conference, according to one of the people briefed on the matter.

Negotiators remained in suspense late Wednesday, as the Justice Department and the bank worked out the final details of the settlement and had yet to sign any paperwork, the people said. The Justice Department was still negotiating part of the consumer relief portion of the deal and the exact nature of conduct that would be covered as part of the settlement.

For the Justice Department, which has come under fire for an uneven response to the financial crisis, the case was intended as a signature moment and a warning shot to all of Wall Street. The deal would eclipse the sums that JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup paid recently to settle similar cases. And the settlement is sure to be the largest among those still to come, as the Justice Department is expected to shift its attention to banks like Goldman Sachs and Wells Fargo.

Yet the Bank of America deal — some of whose details have emerged in recent weeks — has already drawn criticism for what it lacks. In lieu of lawsuits from various United States attorney offices, the deal will include a statement of facts that outlines the bank's misconduct in only the broadest of terms.

The bank, which presented a series of lowball offers to the government before eventually settling, narrowly avoided one of those lawsuits. Last month, as Mr. Fishman of New Jersey was completing a civil case accusing the bank's Merrill Lynch unit of defrauding investors in mortgage securities, Bank of America raised its offer to $14 billion, half of which would come in the form of a cash penalty.

The bank was reluctant to pay more to settle the New Jersey investigation or others. Much of the misconduct, the bank contended, occurred not at Bank of America but at Countrywide Financial and Merrill Lynch, the companies that the bank bought during the financial crisis.

Bank of America's $14 billion offer, however, failed to placate prosecutors, who have largely rejected the bank's claim that it should not be penalized for the sins of Countrywide and Merrill. Prosecutors continued to demand more than $10 billion in cash as part of an overall $17 billion deal.

It took an intervention at the top of the Justice Department and the bank for the deal to materialize.

In a phone call on July 30 with the bank's chief executive, Brian T. Moynihan, Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. demanded that the bank raise its offer by the next morning. Otherwise, he explained, the New Jersey prosecutors would file suit.

With 10 minutes to spare on July 31, a bank lawyer called the Justice Department with an offer: about $9 billion in cash and $7 billion in soft-dollar payments. The Justice Department accepted, setting in motion weeks of negotiations about the deal's fine print.

A version of this article appears in print on 08/21/2014, on page B1 of the NewYork edition with the headline: $16.65 Billion Mortgage Deal Nears for Bank of America.


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DealBook: In Silicon Valley, Mergers Must Meet the Toothbrush Test

Written By Unknown on Senin, 18 Agustus 2014 | 13.07

Photo Credit Liz Grauman/The New York Times

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — When deciding whether Google should spend millions or even billions of dollars in acquiring a new company, its chief executive, Larry Page, asks whether the acquisition passes the toothbrush test: Is it something you will use once or twice a day, and does it make your life better?

The esoteric criterion shuns traditional measures of valuing a company like earnings, discounted cash flow or even sales. Instead, Mr. Page is looking for usefulness above profitability, and long-term potential over near-term financial gain.

Google's toothbrush test highlights the increasing autonomy of Silicon Valley's biggest corporate acquirers — and the marginalized role that investment banks are playing in the latest boom in technology deals.

Many of the biggest technology companies are now going it alone when striking large mergers and acquisitions. Companies like Google, Facebook and Cisco Systems are leaning on their internal corporate development teams to identify targets, conduct due diligence and negotiate terms instead of relying on Wall Street bankers.

"Larry will look at potential deals at a very early stage," said Donald Harrison, Google's vice president of corporate development. "Bankers can be helpful, but they're not necessarily core to the discussions."

Deals with unadvised buyers are increasing rapidly. The acquiring company did not use an investment bank in 69 percent of American technology acquisitions worth more than $100 million this year, according to Dealogic. That number was 27 percent 10 years ago.

When Apple bought Beats Electronics for $3 billion this year, it eschewed the help of professional deal advisers. When Facebook spent $2.3 billion for the virtual reality company Oculus VR in March, it did so without the help of bankers. And when Google acquired the mapping company Waze for $1 billion last year, no bank got a cut of the fees.

Photo Above, executives from Beats Electronics and Apple, after Apple bought Beats this year in a $3 billion deal conducted without Wall Street's help.Credit Paul Sakuma/Apple

In June, one of the largest-ever deals with an unadvised buyer was announced when Oracle, known for its refusal to use investment bankers, acquired Micros Systems for about $5 billion. The biggest such deal came in 2011, when Microsoft, acting alone, bought Skype from Silver Lake Partners for $8.5 billion.

The diminished reliance on investment banks comes as technology deal-making is booming. More than $100 billion in such deals have been announced in the United States this year, the most since 2000, according to Dealogic.

At the heart of the disconnect between technology companies and banks is the belief among many tech executives that some advisers simply do not know what companies like Google and Facebook are looking for.

"Bankers do two things well: financial evaluation and negotiation," said Richard E. Climan, a partner at the law firm Weil, Gotshal & Manges who often works with companies to complete deals where no banks are involved. "But there's a feeling that investment bankers might not be so important on the evaluation of early-stage tech companies."

Amin Zoufonoun, Facebook's vice president for corporate development, said some bankers would come in and pitch acquisition candidates, like the user reviews site Yelp or the payment network PayPal. But instead of trying to swallow already established Internet brands, Facebook uses acquisitions to make big bets on the future and plug technical holes. And in Silicon Valley's relatively small circle of elite entrepreneurs, executives and venture capitalists, connections are easy and ample.

Facebook's most recent big deal, the acquisition of Oculus VR, came as a surprise to even seasoned technology watchers. But Marc Andreessen, a Facebook board member, was also on the board of Oculus VR, paving the way for the deal. The move had nothing to do with improving the social network's main site or increasing sales. Instead, it was a bet that virtual reality would emerge as a new operating system of sorts.

While other companies focus on deals that will bolster their earnings per share, "we haven't done a single deal like that, where we are looking at a target with that being a rationale," Mr. Zoufonoun said.

Many of the most well-known recent technology acquisition deals have been made without the buyer being advised by a banker, a trend that seems to be increasing.

U.S. TECHNOLOGY SECTOR MERGER AND ACQUISTION DEALS

Selected deals made with no adviser to the buyer

Percentage of deals over $100 million made with no adviser to the buyer

Percentage of deals over $100 million made with no adviser to the buyer

U.S. TECHNOLOGY SECTOR MERGER AND ACQUISTION DEALS

Selected deals made with no adviser to the buyer

The same dynamic was true when Google acquired Nest, the home monitoring company, for $3.2 billion this year. Nest's current sales are a drop in Google's ocean of profit, but the deal gave Google an entry to a potentially huge new market.

Big tech companies sometimes struggle to explain such unconventional deals to investors. When Facebook spent $19 billion to acquire WhatsApp, assisted only by the boutique bank Allen & Company, shareholders tried to square the enormous price with WhatsApp's small team of engineers and minuscule revenue.

"It's more art than science at times," said Sanjay Kacholiya, head of corporate development at Eventbrite, a ticketing start-up. "That can make it difficult for an investment banker who's familiar with earnings per share and discounted cash flow."

Not all unadvised deals go well. Google spent $228 million on the social games company Slide without the help of a bank, then unceremoniously shut it down. Cisco didn't work with a bank when it paid $590 million for the maker of Flip video cameras, and it wound up shuttering the unit quickly. But thanks to tech companies' enormous war chests, such mistakes rarely have long-term consequences.

While traditional investment banks might not be comfortable suggesting that clients pay such startling prices for relative unknowns, many big tech companies have built up robust corporate development departments designed to do just that. The teams are largely staffed by former bankers who have abandoned pinstripes and wingtips for T-shirts and sneakers.

Cisco, which has acquired more than 170 companies, decided it was more efficient — and more economical — to hire its own full-time bankers rather than pay millions of dollars in fees each time it struck a deal.

"Our heritage has been embracing M.&A. as a way to enter new markets," said Hilton Romanski, Cisco's head of corporate development, who started his career as a JPMorgan banker. "It makes sense to build a relatively scaled effort around M.&A. with teams and talent that understand the market."

Facebook has hired bankers away from Credit Suisse and Jefferies, among other companies, and gives them more responsibility than they would have at a bank. "They can run a deal from beginning to end," Mr. Zoufonoun said. "As an analyst, they were doing one part of a pitch deck."

At Google, Mr. Harrison has an employee looking after the deal needs of each of the company's 12 product areas, like ads, YouTube and search. That person goes to all meetings held by the senior members of that group, staying attuned to possible acquisition needs.

But the hours are not necessarily any better than on Wall Street, said Mr. Zoufonoun, who stayed up several nights in a row working to close the WhatsApp deal and fell asleep at the office the day it was announced.

Once a target is identified and it is time for an approach and negotiations, corporate acquirers working on their own often diverge from the standard advice given out by bankers.

Mr. Zuckerberg developed friendships with the chief executives of Instagram and WhatsApp before Facebook went on to buy them. Only after the men knew one another well and began discussing integrating the products did discussions about actual transactions begin. Even then, much of the focus was on how autonomously the target company would operate once acquired.

"It's very easy to treat M.&A. transactionally, to not put the target company first. Are we aligned? Do we want the same thing post-acquisition?" Mr. Zoufonoun said. "I always use the marriage example. You should spend a lot of time dating first. It takes two to dance."

Once a deal is made, the real work of merging corporate cultures begins. "The success or failure of deals is really determined by the success or failure of the integration," Mr. Harrison said, adding that Google closely monitored new acquisitions for two years.

The trick is to strike the right balance of blending teams while also allowing for a measure of autonomy.

"The last thing you want to do as an acquirer is go in there and start changing things around," Mr. Zoufonoun said.

Tech companies emphasize that they maintain good relationships with many banks and use them on big deals when financing or fairness opinions — independent justifications of a deal — are needed. When Google acquired Nest, for example, Lazard provided a fairness opinion to Google's board.

But often, when big tech companies are looking to grow through acquisitions, it is the culture and vision, not the earnings and revenue, that are of paramount importance. And for the likes of Facebook and Google — shareholder darlings that are flush with cash and run by well-connected entrepreneurs — it is easier than ever to get by without bankers.

"The most important thing is that soft stuff," Mr. Zoufonoun said. "And that soft stuff is more challenging for a bank or an adviser to tap into."

A version of this article appears in print on 08/18/2014, on page B1 of the NewYork edition with the headline: Rise of the Toothbrush Test.


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News: Live Updates on Police Shooting in Missouri

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 16 Agustus 2014 | 13.07

Photo Captain Ron Johnson, the Highway Patrol official who is heading security in Ferguson, and Missouri Governor Jay Nixon spoke at a news conference in Ferguson, Mo., on Friday.Credit Eric Thayer for The New York Times

The police chief in Ferguson, Mo., identified the officer who was involved in the fatal shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed 18-year-old black man who was killed on Saturday. The Justice Department is investigating the shooting, which prompted protests in the St. Louis suburb and a robust debate about the militarization of local police departments around the country.

5:28 P.M. Brown Family Representatives Appeal for Calm

A cousin of Michael Brown appealed for calm amid renewed anger in Ferguson, Mo. toward the police following the release of incident reports and images of Mr. Brown as a robbery suspect on the same day he was shot and killed by a police officer.

"Please support us," Eric Davis said at a news conference with two of the family's lawyers Anthony D. Gray and Daryl D. Parks. "But do not get distracted. We do not want to see any violence in the streets."

Mr. Davis said it was deeply upsetting for Michael Brown's family to learn that police officials had released information about their son as a suspect in a robbery at a convenience store without making it clear at the time that the robbery was not linked to the shooting.

Several hours after the release of the images and documents, Thomas Jackson, the police chief, told reporters Friday afternoon that the police officer involved in the shooting did not know Mr. Brown was a robbery suspect. He said the officer initially stopped Mr. Brown for walking in the middle of the road and blocking traffic.

Mr. Jackson said he released the documents at the request of media outlets seeking information about events that day. However, he did not release information about the shooting, which is under investigation by local and federal authorities.

"We must remain peaceful," said Mr. Davis. "Whatever took place had nothing to do with an individual getting on his hands and knees with a universal call for surrender. The officer shot him. We want the truth to come out and we are sure it will. "

4:30 P.M. Live Video of News Conference With Brown Family

Members of the Brown family hold a news conference outside police headquarters in Ferguson, Mo.

3:21 P.M. Ferguson Police Chief Says Robbery Unrelated to Stop

Thomas Jackson, the police chief in Ferguson, Mo., said the police officer who fatally shot Michael Brown did not know about an earlier robbery when he stopped Mr. Brown.

Chief Jackson said the police officer stopped Mr. Brown because he was walking in the middle of the street, blocking traffic.

"This robbery does not relate to the initial contact between the officer and Michael Brown," Chief Jackson said. "His initial contact was not related to the robbery."

Chief Jackson came under fire from residents and the family of Mr. Brown, who said that they were "beyond outraged" that police officials released surveillance video and incident reports that say Mr. Brown was involved in a robbery at a convenience store on the day of the shooting.

Chief Jackson defended the release of the video and images, saying that they were requested by numerous media outlets, and that he had to make the information public under state open records laws. He said that he publicly released the name of the police officer at the same time so that he could make public all of the information that he had.

However, he refused to discuss information surrounding the investigation into the shooting.

He described the officer, identified as Darren Wilson, as a gentle person with six years of law enforcement experience. "He never intended for anything like this to happen," he said.

3:00 P.M. Live Video of Ferguson Police Chief at News Conference

Live video of news conference with Thomas Jackson, police chief in Ferguson, Mo.

1:51 P.M. Brown Family Says They Are 'Beyond Outraged'

In a statement, the family of Michael Brown, the unarmed 18-year-old black man fatally shot by the police in Ferguson, Mo., said they were "beyond outraged at the devious way" the police chief had made public information about events on the day of the shooting.

Earlier, city officials released an incident report and surveillance photos of a robbery suspect at a convenience store on the day of the shooting. The police said the man in the photos was Mr. Brown.

The family statement said the information was distributed in such a way that it was intended to "assassinate the character of their son."

The incident report and photos renewed anger among residents in Ferguson, a St. Louis suburb, where protesters have clashed with the police over the shooting.

The full statement from the family of Michael Brown and their lawyers:

Michael Brown's family is beyond outraged at the devious way the police chief has chosen to disseminate piecemeal information in a manner intended to assassinate the character of their son, following such a brutal assassination of his person in broad daylight.

There is nothing based on the facts that have been placed before us that can justify the execution style murder of their child by this police officer as he held his hands up, which is the universal sign of surrender.

The prolonged release of the officer's name and then the subsequent alleged information regarding a robbery is the reason why the family and the local community have such distrust for the local law enforcement agencies.

It is no way transparent to release the still photographs alleged to be Michael Brown and refuse to release the photographs of the officer that executed him.

The police strategy of attempting to blame the victim will not divert our attention, from being focused on the autopsy, ballistics report and the trajectory of the bullets that caused Michael's death and will demonstrate to the world this brutal execution of an unarmed teenager.

12:53 P.M. Police Captain Appeals for Calm Amid Renewed Anger

At a news conference, Gov. Jay Nixon and Capt. Ronald S. Johnson said no arrests had been made on Thursday night during protests in Ferguson, in sharp contrast to the previous violent clashes between officers and demonstrators.

"Clearly, as we've seen over the last 18 to 20 hours, we've made progress," said Mr. Nixon, who sought to ease tensions in the St. Louis suburb by appointing Captain Johnson, of the Highway Patrol, to oversee security.

But the news conference soon turned into what Alan Blinder, a Times reporter in Ferguson, described as a "town hall" meeting, with residents bitterly complaining about police officials' release of a report identifying Michael Brown as a suspect in a robbery at a convenience store on the day of the shooting.

Some residents said that they believed officials released the police report about the robbery as an attempt to justify the shooting.

Faced with renewed anger, Captain Johnson asked for calm and promised that he would return to the streets on Friday night and walk with protesters in an effort to keep peace in Ferguson.

"This inner anger, we have to make sure we don't burn down our own house," Captain Johnson said.

12:30 P.M. Still Images From Convenience Store Surveillance Video
Photo

Security camera video released by the Ferguson, Mo., police of a convenience store robbery shortly before Michael Brown was fatally shot.Credit Ferguson Police Department

In response to requests from news media outlets, city officials in Ferguson, Mo., released the following "still photographs of certain frames of the surveillance video showing the crime giving rise to the initial 9-1-1."

The security camera video showed a confrontation inside the store about 15 minutes before Saturday's fatal shooting of Michael Brown. The images show a man, identified by the police as Mr. Brown, who appears to be pushing a store clerk.

The police said that Mr. Brown, who was in the store with a friend, had stolen a box of Swisher Sweets cigars. When confronted by the clerk, Mr. Brown "forcefully pushed him back into a display rack" before leaving, a police report said.

12:19 P.M. Statement from Gov. Jay Nixon of Missouri

Gov. Jay Nixon on Friday issued a statement after the Ferguson Police Department provided information about the officer involved in the shooting on Saturday of Michael Brown:

I'm pleased that the people of Ferguson and the region began to get some long-overdue information today, and I will continue to call for openness and transparency as the parallel investigations into this tragedy proceed to their necessary conclusions. For the sake of the family, the citizens of Ferguson, and the entire region, it is vital that the investigations into the shooting death of Michael Brown move forward in a thorough, open and transparent manner to ensure that trust is restored and justice is done.

10:41 A.M. Initial Police Incident Report from Shooting
Photo

Part of the incident report of the convenience store robbery released Friday by the Ferguson Police Department.Credit Ferguson Police Department

In response to requests from news media organizations and others, Ferguson city officials on Friday released the following police incident report and supplemental statements, in which responding officers reported their observations during the call and the ensuing investigation. Some details, such as names and addresses, were redacted.

Offense/Incident Report

On 08/09/2014 at approximately 1151 hours, while on a call in the Park Ridge apartment complex, immediately located behind _____, I received a call for a stealing in progress at _____. (______ W, Florissant Ave). I responded to that location and was given a description by dispatch of a b/m in a white T-shirt that was walking northbound on W. Florissant, toward Quiktrip (______ W. Florissant Ave). I did not see the suspect in the area, so I returned to ____ to contact the employee there. I contacted ____ on the parking lot, who continued to point up W. Florissant toward Quiktrip and say, "He went that way." He was indicating with his hands toward his chest and then north on W. Florissant. I still could not see the suspect on W. Florissant, and _____. I went inside to contact a ______ clerk, who was not identified at that time, and and ____ and ____, patron, who was not identified at that time, who advised the suspect took cigars and pushed _____ on his way out. He was wearing a white T-shirt, khaki longer shorts, yellow socks, and a red Cardinals ball cap. They also stated that another b/m was with him, but gave no further description on that suspect. I gave out this information over the radio and drove northbound on W. Florissant to try to find the suspect. Idid not locate the suspects on W. Florissant, so I went into Quiktrip to search for the suspects, and did not locate them.
Anything further will be submitted in a supplementary report.

Supplement 1
On Monday, 08/11/2014 @ 0900 hrs, I was assigned to this investigation.
________ had just come out of the restroom and returned to the counter where she observed Brown tell __________ that he (Brown) wanted several boxes of cigars. As _________ was placing the boxes on the counter, Brown grabbed a box of Swisher Sweet cigars and handed them to Johnson who was standing behind Brown. ________ witnessed _______tell Brown that he had to pay for those cigars first. That is when Brown reached across the counter and grabbed numerous packs of Swisher Sweets and turned to leave the store. ____ then calls "911″. Meanwhile, ____comes out from behind the counter and attempts to stop Brown from leaving. According to ____, ___ was trying to lock the door until Brown returned the merchandise to him. That is when Brown grabbed ____by the shirt and forcefully pushed him back in to a display rack. _____backed way and Brown and Johnson exited the store with the cigars.

Supplement 2
On 08//10/2014, I contacted ____ and received a copy of their surveillance video on disc of the incident. I was unable to view the disc as our computer system would not read it. The disc was entered into evidence. Anything further will be submitted in a supplementary report.

Supplement 3
On 08/10/2014, I returned to _____, (____ W. Florissant) to contact the witnesses from the original incident and obtain written statements. Neither witness was present in the store. I left witness statement forms to be completed and instructed them to call when they were completed, for pickup. Anything further will be submitted in a supplementary report.

Supplement 4
Sir, On 08-09-2014, at approximately 1158 hours, I, ______, responded with _____ to a stealing that had just occurred. While en-route, dispatch advised a black male wearing a white shirt. The suspect reportedly stole a box of cigars. ______ arrived on scene prior to I and obtained the followg information. )_____ advised that the suspect, was wearing a white t-shirt, khaki shorts, yellow socks and wearing a red hat. The suspect was last seen going North on W. Florissant Rd. from Ferguson Ave. I observed no subjects, matching the description, on W. Florissant from Ferguson Av. to Northwinds Estates Dr. I also canvassed Northwinds Estates dr. and did not locate the suspect. _____ was canvassing the are a as well and canvassed Quik Trip. At that time due to locating anyone, I returned in service from assisting with the canvass.

9:45 A.M. Police Chief Identifies Officer in Shooting

Thomas Jackson, the police chief in Ferguson, Mo., identified the officer involved in the fatal shooting of Michael Brown as Darren Wilson. He said at a news conference that police officers had been responding to a report of a robbery.

Chief Jackson said that Officer Wilson had been alerted to the robbery shortly before the encounter with the teenager, Michael Brown, 18, who was walking home from a store on Saturday when he was shot.

The Ferguson police released security camera video after the news conference that showed a confrontation inside the store about 15 minutes before Saturday's shooting. The images show a man, identified by the police as Mr. Brown, who appears to be pushing a store clerk.

The police said that Mr. Brown, who was in the store with a friend, had stolen a box of Swisher Sweets cigars. When confronted by the clerk, Mr. Brown "forcefully pushed him back into a display rack" before leaving, a police report said.

8:30 A.M. Peaceful Protests in Ferguson Overnight

After several nights of violent clashes in Ferguson, Mo., between police officers and protesters, calm was restored to the St. Louis suburb overnight after a new police commander introduced a different approach.

In one of his first moves, Capt. Ronald S. Johnson of the Missouri Highway Patrol, appointed by the governor to direct security operations, walked alongside several groups of protesters through the streets, listening to people and shaking hands.

He also told reporters that he had ordered troopers to remove their tear-gas masks, among other new tactics, to help ease tensions.

To pay tribute to Michael Brown, thousands of people attended peaceful protests in dozens of cities across the country on Thursday night, with many people sharing images from gatherings on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

Here's what Times Square looked like late Thursday.

Wow, Times Square is getting packed by supports for Ferguson http://t.co/F2Ufq9aaPj

— Brad Sams (@bdsams) 15 Aug 14


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