Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Shaw Capital Management Factoring and Financing | Zimbio.com








Five men are scheduled to be arraigned Monday on charges that they tricked hundreds of people into paying thousands of dollars in up-front fees for home loan modifications they never intended to perform.

Jacob John Cunningham, 24, Dominic Adam Nolan, 30, John D. Silva, 27, all of Irvine, Justin Dennis Koelle, 23, of Costa Mesa and Andrew Michael Phalen, 25, of Mission Viejo face multiple felony charges related to the alleged three-year scam.

Authorities claim they created fake home loan modification companies and sent out mailers soliciting fees to adjust customers’ mortgages.

The ads said they were 100% successful and would return the initial fee if the company did not complete the loan modification, according to prosecutors.

It’s illegal to collect fees ahead of performing home loan modifications in California.

As the men collected from their victims, prosecutors said they would change their company’s name, phone number and addresses.

The plot developed in 2011, with the men allegedly representing themselves as CitiFinancial and CitiMortgage and offering home refinancing. Customers were asked to deposit money into the group’s account at a low interest rate.

The total loss is estimated at more than $65,000 nationwide. The men face sentences ranging from seven years and eight months to 21 years and eight months in prison.

— Joseph Serna


Twitter: @JosephSerna

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Shaw Capital Management Financial News : Blog Updates | Blogspot | RedGage

Posted by Shaw Capital Management Financial News on November 17, 2011 in financial
Halloween has ended and we are able to return to the intense business of financial literacy, that your entire month of November can be committed. This can be enshrined within laws, in case Alberta MP James Rajotte offers something to point out over it. He has presented a private member’s bill, Motion 269, which is disputed in the House of Commons later this month. In a media briefing Monday, Rajotte prompted people to get hold of MPs to support it..... Read More
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty was there however scooted away prior to the Q&A period. Before he did, he stated financial literacy and dedicating November with it “means a great deal to me and the government.” This might happen to be a great time to spot whose getting employed in the newest national financial literacy head however it was not really divulged....... Read More
Rather, the newsiest piece has been the British Columbia Securities Commission’s National Report Card on Youth Financial Literacy. BCSC chair Brenda Leong explained the internet study of 3,000 17 to 20-year-olds discovered these kinds of students are prepared to generate over $70,000 annually in 10 years time, or even double the amount actual reported earnings of graduates in their late 20s. 75 % anticipate obtaining a residence in a decade: greater than the real rate associated with owning a home........ Read More
In addition, based from online sources of Shaw Capital Management, they think they will be economically more satisfied compared to their own parents, though 50 % however have financial debt regarding 70%, including an education loan. Fifty percent plan to repay it within 5 years, which in turn Leong identified as “another example of optimism flying in the face of reality.” Student debts are in a record higher $15-million....... Read More
A financial literacy check discovered British Columbia and Alberta students undertaking more than the nation’s common with 35%: 42% of B.C. students rating an A and 37% of Albertans managed it. Leong attributes this kind of fact to either province possess extensive financial life abilities courses into their high school curricula. Developing around the work of Don Stewart’s Financial Literacy Task Force, Leong considers Canada need to be a leader in graduating students proficient in different languages, math and personal finance..... Read More
 The majority of students may need a brand new book created by two members of the task Force: The Smart, Savvy Young Consumer. The publisher is Evelyn Jacks’ Knowledge Bureau News books. The writer is Pat Foran, an experienced broadcaster for CTV’s Consumer Alert. In the beginning, Foran reports financial literacy is “more important than ever,” and claims financial literacy ought to be the stand-alone obligatory program that must definitely be passed to be able to graduate from high school..... Read More
Flaherty and Rajotte point out financial literacy is immediately necessary for a much more complicated financial world, having a challenging variety of option in services and products. However Foran makes it clear the fundamentals are certainly not that challenging one. Actuality to make sure, several grownups currently in the labor force, can also gain from studying basic principles.... Read More

Monday, November 14, 2011

Latest World Headlines: Shaw Capital Management : Syria: Barack Obama ‘set to call for Bashar al-Assad to step down’ | Facebook

shawcapitalmanagementscaminfo.com Daily World Headlines Compilation by Shaw Capital Management


Latest World Headlines: Shaw Capital Management : Syria: Barack Obama ‘set to call for Bashar al-Assad to step down’





By Alex Spillius, Washington
DATE: WED Aug 10, 2011
President Barack Obama is set to call for the first time on Syria’s Bashar al-Assad to step down, according to reports on Tuesday night.

Turking Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu (right) meets with Syrian President Bashar al- Assad Photo: AP
The announcement will be made this week and will be accompanied by new sanctions by the US Treasury Department targeted at individuals in the regime and Syrian government finances, said CNN.
An administration official did not comment on the report, but said: “We’ve previously said Syria would be a better place without Assad, that we believe his regime will be left in the past, and that Assad is on his way out. We’ve also previously indicated that we’d continue to increase pressures, including possible sanctions.”
The Obama administration has been criticised for failing to demand Mr Assad’s departure earlier, but continued violence committed by the regime against protesters has finally brought a change of approach.
Earlier in the day a spokesman for the State Department conceded that Washington had abandoned it bid to engage Damascus.
“In the case of Syria, the message from 2009 was if you are prepared to be a reformer, if you are prepared to work with us on Middle East peace and other issues we share, we can have a new and different kind of partnership,” said Victoria Nuland. But “that is not the path that Assad chose,” she added.
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Syrian forces killed at least 47 people across the country on Tuesday and moved into a town near the Turkish border.
Mr Assad defiantly declared an unceasing battle against the “terrorist groups”. “We will not waver in our pursuit of terrorist groups,” Mr Assad told Ahmet Davutoglu, the visiting Turkish foreign minister.
Army tanks and fighting vehicles advanced through deserted streets in both the west and east of Syria, bringing death and destruction to places that had hitherto been spared and inflicting fresh misery on cities still reeling from the onslaught of recent days.
The scale of the military operations suggested that Mr Assad was in no mood to heed the demands of Saudi Arabia and its allies for an immediate halt to the killing of civilians.
With Western pressure yielding few dividends, Syria’s regional friends and champions in the wider world have taken it upon themselves to intervene in the worsening crisis.
Turkey sent Mr Davutoglu, to deliver a stern warning that Ankara had “run out of patience” with Mr Assad’s government.
In what appeared to be a gesture of defiance, Syrian tanks rolled into the village of Binnish, just 20 miles from the Turkish border, killing at least four people, according to opposition groups.
Turkey became a belated critic of the Syrian crackdown after thousands of civilians escaped onto its soil following an earlier military offensive against border towns and villages. The tales of horror the refugees brought with them did much to galvanise public opinion in Turkey against Mr Assad, leading to pressure on the government to take a firmer stance.
Brazil, India and South Africa, which all helped to scotch Western attempts to secure a United Nations Security Council resolution against Syria, are also to send envoys to Damascus tomorrow to plead for restraint.
Russia, traditionally Syria’s most powerful international champion, added its weight to the escalating pressure. Sergei Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, telephoned his Syrian counterpart Walid Muallem yesterday with a plea for the bloodshed to end.
Instead, however, the death toll mounted. Nearly 400 people have been killed since Mr Assad launched a fresh military offensive against opposition strongholds on the eve of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan at the beginning of last week. More than 2,000 have died since the uprising began in mid-March.
Deir al-Zor, a tribal city in Syria’s sparsely populated east, came under fresh artillery and automatic gunfire as tanks and troops cleared the city of opposition suburb by suburb. At least 17 people were killed yesterday, the third day of operations in the city, opposition groups said.
Syrian state television denied that any tanks were in the city, the country’s fifth largest, a claim challenged by amateur video footage showing tanks advancing down empty streets amid heavy bursts of gunfire and the crump of exploding shells.
“The situation is desperate,” one Syrian activist who has been in touch with people in the city said. “People are burying their dead in gardens and in small parks because it is too dangerous to go to cemeteries. Snipers are everywhere.”
To the west, a new assault was launched on villages close to the Hama, the city that bore the brunt of the Ramadan offensive last week.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Shaw Capital Management : Warning: A Review of This Week’s Hot Flicks


Rise of the Planet of the Apes
Teen sci-fi enthusiasts is going to be absolutely hooked with this smart, if not uplifting prequel of the original “Planet of the Apes” in 1968 and all it’sTV, film and video game offshoots.
A note of caution, though with its use of “motion-capture” engineering that allows the actual gorillas and chimps to look as full-blooded as those of the humans in the film – a product of computer effects overlaid upon a human actor. That’s why the physical violence and disorder in this movie could affect to and make it look very real to the minds of young audience.
James Franco plays the protagonist named Will, an excellent scientist who develops a certain anti-Alzheimer’s medication, albeit with a viral part. It is tested on apes and resulted in the animals to to grow rather violent, paving the way for the project to be scrapped. However,  Will still continue to give the particular medication to his father (John Lithgow), who is suffering from Alzheimer’s. Will also takes into his care a baby chimp, Caesar, who was exposed to the drug during their experiments.
When Caesar (Andy Serkis) grew up, he showed signs of superintelligence. But after he acted violently towards someone once, Will is obliged to keep him in a “sanctuary” which ends up to be described as a kind of jail delivering apes for research. Caesar, after having a trainer Tom Felton) frequently maltreat him, instigates the primate uprising against the human race.
The apes encounter law enforcement officials, various weapons, planes and others as they proceed to climb the wires of the Golden Gate Bridge and later dangle through the treetops in Redwood Forest. They plan to rule. That is what you get for screwing up with genetics, cautions this science-fiction film.
There are some scenes in this film that depicts violence between animals and humans that are extreme and may seem too upsetting for some kids, pushing the PG-13 rate to the limit. Early on in the movie, such scenes occur in short sequences but towards the end there is already a prevalent chaos. Although the wounds and the fights are not very visual, there’s certainly death and blood with weapons including iron fence spikes,  electrical prods, guns, tranquilizer darts and others that will not be suitable for the children viewing.
Cowboys & Aliens
Even pre-teens may find this particular PG-13 sci-fi cum Western-themed movie as violent. That’s due to it’s uncomplicated storytelling, though it is actually inspired by a comic novel.
Right away, you’ll realize something’s unusual, when a sturdy man (Daniel Craig) wakes up in the middle of the desert in 1875 and have no idea who he is. What’s more, he’s got a modern-looking metallic bracelet on his arm that he can’t remove.
Later into the film, he eventually learned of his true name, Jake Lonergan,along with the information that he is wanted for murder and theft. Lonergan walks into town met a drunk young person, Percy (Robert Dano) whom he somehow humiliated. As it turns out, Percy’s father is a cattle tycoon, Woodrow Dolarhyde (Harrison Ford), a rogue and grumpy military man.
Just as everyone prepares for a classic Mexican standoff, in came an alien plane, blowing and yanking away various people on wires. This odd threat obliged Lonergan and Dolarhyde, along with the rest of the townsfolk, Indian warriors, robbery gangs and cowpokes to find a common goal.
The said aliens sport the usual features (massive, slimy, reptilian-like creatures) sufficient to freak out some kids below the age of 12. Craig and Ford made nice, rough heroes amidst a superb cast.
The weapon fights and alien episodes using their weird-looking planes may come off as an extreme violent movie. Humans engage in more than one bloody and disturbing battle. The actual climactic struggle feature firearms, explosives and bows-and-arrows. It even involves gutting out of several humans by the supposed aliens and burning of a dead body. The screenplay even has expletives, anti-Indian slurs and a mention of ‘whores’. As expected from a cowboy movie, there’s a lot of alcohol-drinking involved and an indirect nudity.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Latest World Headlines: Shaw Capital Management | Gamers fears after Sony issue PlayStation

http://latest.shawcapitalmanagement-headlines.com/2011/05/latest-world-headlines-shaw-capital-management-gamers-fears-after-sony-issue-playstation-hacking-warning/


Gamers fears after Sony issue PlayStation hacking warning
Gamers fears after Sony issue PlayStation hacking warning
GAMING shops across Dorset have been inundated with calls after Sony warned PlayStation Network users their personal data may have been stolen.
Worried users fear credit card details, passwords and email addresses could have been taken by hackers who attacked the company’s online service.
But store bosses have told them all they can do is wait for information from Sony and remain on their guard against possible scam telephone calls and e-mails.
“Keep calm and don’t panic is the best advice I can give,” said a local store manager.
“There is nothing we can do on the ground – people just have to keep in touch with Sony and be patient while they try to work out exactly what has happened.
“We have had quite a few calls from concerned customers because it has affected a lot of people.”
PlayStation Network is Sony’s online service where users can play online or buy games and extra content.
Those who simply play will not have provided credit card details because the service is free but their email addresses and passwords may have been stolen.
Access to the service was suspended last week after Sony discovered account information was compromised between April 17 and 19. The service is still unavailable.
Sony’s head of communications for Europe, Nick Caplin, said information was “compromised in connection with an illegal and unauthorised intrusion into our network”.
He added: “For your security, we encourage you to be especially aware of email, telephone and postal mail scams that ask for personal or sensitive information. While there is no evidence that credit card data was taken, we cannot rule out the possibility.” Sony has been criticised by some gamers who said the company should have warned them earlier that data had been taken.
But others said they trust Sony to deal with the problem and to make sure it doesn’t happen again.
Ben Croucher, 22, visiting Bournemouth, said: “I use PlayStation network so it is a bit annoying that it has been suspended but I’m not too worried about the data thing – I will just be careful with emails.”
But Pippa Jones, 21, said: “I think they should have warned people as soon as it happened. Bank accounts could have been emptied in that time.”

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Latest World Headlines: Shaw Capital Management : Syria: Barack Obama ‘set to call for Bashar al-Assad to step down’



By Alex Spillius, Washington
DATE: WED Aug 10, 2011

President Barack Obama is set to call for the first time on Syria’s Bashar al-Assad to step down, according to reports on Tuesday night.


Turking Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu (right) meets with Syrian President Bashar al- Assad Photo: AP
The announcement will be made this week and will be accompanied by new sanctions by the US Treasury Department targeted at individuals in the regime and Syrian government finances, said CNN.
An administration official did not comment on the report, but said: “We’ve previously said Syria would be a better place without Assad, that we believe his regime will be left in the past, and that Assad is on his way out. We’ve also previously indicated that we’d continue to increase pressures, including possible sanctions.”
The Obama administration has been criticised for failing to demand Mr Assad’s departure earlier, but continued violence committed by the regime against protesters has finally brought a change of approach.
Earlier in the day a spokesman for the State Department conceded that Washington had abandoned it bid to engage Damascus.
“In the case of Syria, the message from 2009 was if you are prepared to be a reformer, if you are prepared to work with us on Middle East peace and other issues we share, we can have a new and different kind of partnership,” said Victoria Nuland. But “that is not the path that Assad chose,” she added.

RELATED ARTICLES
Syrian forces killed at least 47 people across the country on Tuesday and moved into a town near the Turkish border.
Mr Assad defiantly declared an unceasing battle against the “terrorist groups”. “We will not waver in our pursuit of terrorist groups,” Mr Assad told Ahmet Davutoglu, the visiting Turkish foreign minister.
Army tanks and fighting vehicles advanced through deserted streets in both the west and east of Syria, bringing death and destruction to places that had hitherto been spared and inflicting fresh misery on cities still reeling from the onslaught of recent days.
The scale of the military operations suggested that Mr Assad was in no mood to heed the demands of Saudi Arabia and its allies for an immediate halt to the killing of civilians.
With Western pressure yielding few dividends, Syria’s regional friends and champions in the wider world have taken it upon themselves to intervene in the worsening crisis.
Turkey sent Mr Davutoglu, to deliver a stern warning that Ankara had “run out of patience” with Mr Assad’s government.
In what appeared to be a gesture of defiance, Syrian tanks rolled into the village of Binnish, just 20 miles from the Turkish border, killing at least four people, according to opposition groups.
Turkey became a belated critic of the Syrian crackdown after thousands of civilians escaped onto its soil following an earlier military offensive against border towns and villages. The tales of horror the refugees brought with them did much to galvanise public opinion in Turkey against Mr Assad, leading to pressure on the government to take a firmer stance.
Brazil, India and South Africa, which all helped to scotch Western attempts to secure a United Nations Security Council resolution against Syria, are also to send envoys to Damascus tomorrow to plead for restraint.
Russia, traditionally Syria’s most powerful international champion, added its weight to the escalating pressure. Sergei Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, telephoned his Syrian counterpart Walid Muallem yesterday with a plea for the bloodshed to end.
Instead, however, the death toll mounted. Nearly 400 people have been killed since Mr Assad launched a fresh military offensive against opposition strongholds on the eve of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan at the beginning of last week. More than 2,000 have died since the uprising began in mid-March.
Deir al-Zor, a tribal city in Syria’s sparsely populated east, came under fresh artillery and automatic gunfire as tanks and troops cleared the city of opposition suburb by suburb. At least 17 people were killed yesterday, the third day of operations in the city, opposition groups said.
Syrian state television denied that any tanks were in the city, the country’s fifth largest, a claim challenged by amateur video footage showing tanks advancing down empty streets amid heavy bursts of gunfire and the crump of exploding shells.
“The situation is desperate,” one Syrian activist who has been in touch with people in the city said. “People are burying their dead in gardens and in small parks because it is too dangerous to go to cemeteries. Snipers are everywhere.”
To the west, a new assault was launched on villages close to the Hama, the city that bore the brunt of the Ramadan offensive last week.

Latest World Headlines: Shaw Capital Management | Hollywood Wins Court Order to Force BT to Block Pirate Site Newzbin2




DATE: FRI July 29, 2011

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The major Hollywood studios, backed by the Motion Picture Association, persuaded a judge to order BT to block all access to suspected pirate site Newzbin2.

Hollywood movie studios won a legal victory as Britain’s highest court ordered a telecommunications company to block access to a Website serving up pirated content.
A High Court judge ruled in favor of the Motion Picture Association and ordered BT Group on July 28 to block users trying to access Newzbin2. A members-only site, Newzbin2 aggregates links to free movies and TV shows posted on Usenet boards.
The case, brought by the international arm of Hollywood’s Motion Picture Association of America, would allow major studios such as Twentieth Century Fox, Universal Studios, Warner Bros., Viacom’s Paramount Pictures and Sony’s Columbia Pictures to go after other ISPs to block other pirate sites. ISPs generally resist requests from copyright holders to block sites, saying the decisions lay with the courts.
The decision “clearly shows that rights holders need to prove their claims and convince a judge to make a court order. BT has consistently said that rights holders need to take this route,” BT said.
In the United States, several ISPs recently signed a voluntary agreement with the music and movie businesses to a “six strikes” system that would warn users about pirating content. The agreement stopped short of requiring ISPs to block violators from going online.
While this ruling would set a legal precedent only within the United Kingdom, it may have an effect on how Hollywood pursues pirates closer to home.PROTECT-IP Act, a Hollywood-backed copyright infringement legislation that would require ISPs to blacklist violators, is currently working its way through the Senate. While copyright holders have praised the bill, there is a lot of opposition from free speech advocates who argue the bill’s domain-blocking provisions are essentially promoting Internet censorship.
“The Act would allow courts to order any Internet service to stop recognizing [a] site even on a temporary restraining order … issued the same day the complaint is filed,” according to a July 5 open letter signed by more than 90 law professors from around the country.
If passed, PIPA gives the judge the authority to decide whether to block a domain after hearing only from the government. Site owners won’t have the opportunity to defend themselves or to appeal the decision, which is clearly unconstitutional, law professors wrote.
The law professors noted that blocking entire domains could “suppress vast amounts of protected speech containing no infringing content whatsoever” if the domain is blocked based on finding infringing material on a single subdomain. This will definitely be an issue with Newzbin2, “Mr. White,” the anonymous spokesperson of the site, noted in a blog, as there are a lot of news items posted on other subdomains that aren’t infringing any copyrighted content.
While the judge noted that possibility, he said “the incidence of such uses is de minimis,” prompting Mr. White to write, “We don’t consider our blog to be earth shattering literature to rival Graham Green, but our readers are entitled to hear our views and news.”
Newzbin actually was shut down by court order last year, but relaunched itself from an offshore server, under a new domain and a modified name, according to the MPA. Mr. White has stated in the past that Newzbin2 is “an entirely different crew from Newzbin1.”
The MPA said the judge’s ruling means that if Newzbin changes again, as long as it is fundamentally the same operation, the same court order will still apply.
“In my judgment it follows that BT has actual knowledge of other persons using its service to infringe copyright: it knows that the users and operators of Newbin2 infringe copyright on a large scale, and in particular infringe the copyrights of the Studios in large numbers of their films and television programmes,” Justice Arnold, who presided over the case, said. “It knows that the users of Newzbin2 include BT subscribers, and it knows those users use its service to receive infringing copies of copyright works made available to them by Newzbin2.”
Even though BT is not expected to appeal the ruling, the Internet service provider has asked for some clarification, including who would be paying for the blocking. The company has the discretion to choose the blocking technology, but the judge recommended using the same Cleanfeed system that is often used to block Websites containing certain types of adult content.
The telecom giant, the largest in the United Kingdom, is also very worried about the consequences of accidentally blocking an innocent site. “If someone sues, then who will pay? We need clarification,” Simon Milner, BT’s head of group policy, told the BBC.
Mr. White predicted the court order will result in smaller ISPs being “railroaded into Web censorship” as the “Newzbin 2 Injunction” would give any individual or organization the ability to shut down any Web content they find objectionable. “The free Internet in the UK just had a heart attack,” said Mr. White.