The Wall Street Journal - 22.02.2020 - 23.02.2020

(Axel Boer) #1

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. ** Saturday/Sunday, February 22 - 23, 2020 |A


WASHINGTON—President
Trump is considering four can-
didates to be his permanent di-
rector of national intelligence,
after removing an acting spy
chief, Joseph Maguire, whose
subordinate had informed law-
makers of Russia’s apparent
preference for Mr. Trump in
this year’s election.
The president didn’t identify
any candidates in the running,
but he said on Twitter he plans
to fill the post in the coming
weeks. The White House didn’t
offer additional comment.
Pete Hoekstra, the U.S. am-
bassador to the Netherlands
and former Republican chair-
man of the House Intelligence
Committee, is among contend-
ers and is being pushed by peo-
ple close to the White House,
according to people familiar
with the matter. Reached by
phone, Mr. Hoekstra declined to
comment.
Mr. Trump’s tweet came
amid growing uncertainty
about the future of the Office of
the Director of National Intelli-
gence, known as ODNI, which
was established in the wake of
the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to
better coordinate intelligence
among more than a dozen
agencies, including the Central
Intelligence Agency and Na-
tional Security Agency.
The new director would step
into a role that hasn’t had a
permanent chief since last sum-
mer, when Mr. Trump pushed
out Dan Coats, a Republican
former senator who viewed the
threat posed by Russia to U.S.
elections as paramount, in dis-
agreement with his boss. This
week, Mr. Trump named Rich-
ard Grenell, the U.S. ambassa-
dor to Germany and Trump loy-
alist who has publicly
questioned Russian interfer-
ence, as acting director, to suc-
ceed Mr. Maguire.
Mr. Trump lashed out at Mr.
Maguire this month after learn-
ing that one of his subordinates
had briefed the House Intelli-
gence Committee about Rus-
sia’s apparent preference for
Mr. Trump in the 2020 presi-
dential race, people familiar
with the matter said. Mr.
Trump has questioned the con-
clusion of U.S. intelligence
agencies that Russia interfered
in the 2016 contest in order to
help him win.
Mr. Trump, at a campaign
rally in Las Vegas on Friday,
dismissed reports that U.S. in-
telligence agencies believe Rus-
sia may seek to interfere in the
2020 election on his behalf,
calling them “disinformation.”
The classified hearing was
attended by both Democrats
and Republicans, and the intel-
ligence drew from assessments
from U.S. intelligence agencies,
people familiar with the matter
said.
A person familiar with the
matter said Mr. Maguire was
unlikely to be tapped for the
permanent director of national
intelligence position regardless
of the recent Oval Office clash.
Mr. Maguire resigned on Friday
after briefly returning to his
previous post as director of the
intelligence community’s Na-
tional Counterterrorism Center,
a U.S. official said.
Mr. Grenell has also said
that he wouldn’t be the nomi-
nee to be the permanent intelli-
gence chief.
Mr. Maguire’s acting deputy,
Andrew Hallman, is also leaving
that post and is returning to
the CIA. Democrats and former
officials said the White House
appeared to be filling the of-
fice’s top ranks with loyalists to
Mr. Trump who, like Mr.
Grenell, have limited or no in-
telligence experience.
Other personnel moves in-
cluded the installment of Kash
Patel, a former top national se-
curity official who previously
worked to help Republicans
challenge the origins of the in-
vestigation into Russia’s inter-
ference in the 2016 election, in
a senior adviser role at ODNI to
work alongside Mr. Grenell, a
person familiar with the matter
said.
Federal law on executive
branch vacancies dictates that
Mr. Grenell can serve in the
role only until March 11 unless
Mr. Trump submits a formal
nomination to the Senate for a
permanent successor.
—Warren P. Strobel
contributed to this article.


BYCATHERINELUCEY
ANDDUSTINVOLZ


President


Weighs


Spy Chief


Candidates


Rules limited water supply for farmers during the state’s drought to protect species like smelt.

RICH PEDRONCELLI/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Administration’s threats not
only put women’s health on
the line, but illegally threaten
crucial public health funding
that Californians rely on.”
Friday’s response raises the
stakes in the battle between
California and the administra-
tion over abortion, with po-
tentially billions of dollars of
health funding on the line and
a legal battle likely to follow.
The HHS Office for Civil
Rights said last month the
state’s abortion coverage re-
quirement violated federal law
that banned government enti-
ties that receive HHS funding
from discriminating against
health-care organizations be-
cause they don’t provide abor-
tion or abortion coverage.
The department gave Cali-
fornia 30 days to signal com-
pliance before it said it would
take action that could result
in cutting HHS funds. Califor-

nia gets $51 billion from HHS
for its Medicaid program, ac-
cording to the Kaiser Family
Foundation.
Roger Severino, director of
the HHS rights office said, “For
decades Californians could
choose whether or not they
wanted abortion-free health
insurance coverage until Cali-
fornia took away that option.
Religious groups say Cali-
fornia’s mandates force them
to violate their beliefs by pur-
chasing health insurance that
covers abortions or by using
their premiums to help pay for
other consumers’ abortions.
Abortion-rights groups say
that states have the long-held
right to regulate their own in-
surance markets. They say
that abortion, which has been
legal nationally for decades, is
a medical procedure that
should be covered just like
prenatal and maternity care.

WASHINGTON—California
disputed a Trump administra-
tion assertion that the state is
violating U.S. law by requiring
insurers to cover abortion, af-
ter federal officials threatened
to withhold funding if it
doesn’t change its policy.
California Democratic Attor-
ney General Xavier Becerra
wrote in a letter to the Depart-
ment of Health and Human
Services that the state’s abor-
tion-coverage requirement
wasn’t in violation of federal
law. It also noted that Califor-
nia provided a religious exemp-
tion in 2015 to the mandate.
“California has the sover-
eign right to protect women’s
reproductive rights. Political
grandstanding should never in-
terfere with that,” Mr. Becerra
said in a statement before the
letter was sent. “The Trump

BYSTEPHANIEARMOUR

California Fights U.S. Over


Abortion-Coverage Mandate


California officials sued the
Trump administration Thursday,
asserting the president’s order
granting the state’s farmers more
access to water could lead to the
extinction of several fish species.
A day earlier, President
Trump authorized an Interior De-
partment order that allows Cen-
tral Valley farmers to pump
more water, fulfilling a 2016
campaign promise to loosen re-
strictions in the state, delighting

farmers and prompting anger
from environmentalists. The law-
suit, filed in the U.S. District
Court in San Francisco, chal-
lenges the new order and argues
recent biological opinions pre-
pared by federal agencies are
unlawful.
Rules for the federal Central
Valley Project and California
State Water Project limited wa-
ter supply for Central Valley
farmers during the state’s years-

long drought to protect threat-
ened species like smelt and
salmon.
“Our team of career profes-
sionals did a great job using the
best available science to develop
new operational plans for the
coordinated operation of the
Central Valley Project and State
Water Project,” U.S. Interior Sec-
retary David Bernhardt said in
response to the lawsuit.
—Jennifer Calfas

U.S. NEWS


cline. The amount of bail bonds
written fell about 10% to just
over $14 billion in 2018, ac-
cording to an analysis of indus-
try data by insurance-ratings
firm A.M. Best Co. From 2009
through 2016 the industry
grew by about 25%, but more
recently it experienced two
straight years of declines.
Bail-bond companies have
long been essential to the U.S.
criminal-justice system, help-
ing defendants who can’t af-
ford bail by posting the cash
for their release and ensuring
they show up in court. In ex-
change, they charge a fee of
about 10% of the amount of
bail and can seize collateral if a
defendant misses court.
The most serious pressure
on the bail-bond industry has
been a host of changes to local
laws governing how judges re-
lease the accused pretrial, as
state politicians question the
value of bail. More than 20
states and numerous counties
have largely eliminated cash
bail for low-level and nonvio-
lent offenders in recent years.

“If criminal-justice reform
were to take effect in enough
states, they could be in serious
trouble,” said David Blades, a
senior industry analyst at A.M.
Best, of bail-bond companies.
He added that he doesn’t be-
lieve the industry is yet under
existential threat.
Industry experts said the
bail industry’s gradual decline
could become a free fall if a
law passed in 2018 goes into
effect in California. The state is
by far the industry’s largest
market, accounting for one-
quarter of the bail-bond indus-
try’s revenue, according to the
American Bail Coalition, a
trade association for bail insur-
ance companies.
The California measure
would replace cash bail with an
algorithm that would help de-
termine whether those accused
of a crime were safe to release.
Implementation has been sus-
pended until a referendum is
held in November.
“Everybody is collectively
holding their breath to see
what happens in California,”

said Jeff Clayton, the American
Bail Coalition’s executive direc-
tor.
Even without specific regu-
latory changes, Mr. Clayton
said the industry is finding it-
self under pressure. Judges are
letting more low-risk offenders

go free, leaving bail-bond com-
panies to deal with higher-risk
offenders who require more
monitoring.
Bail-bond agents have had
accounts refused or closed at
some large banks, including
Bank of America Corp., Mr.
Clayton said.
Activists have also targeted
the bail-bond industry by pres-
suring insurers and financial
firms that “provide the finan-
cial underpinning for the entire
bail-bond industry,” said Udi
Ofer, director of the justice di-
vision at the ACLU.
The ACLU and another pro-
gressive civil-rights advocacy
group, Color of Change, em-
barked on a campaign that in-
cluded sending letters to En-
deavour and meeting with the
private-equity firm to try to
get it to sell its stake in Alad-
din, which the fund described
as the largest retail pretrial re-
lease service provider in the
country, operating 50 locations
and employing 600 people.
—Ben Eisen
contributed to this article.

The bail-bond industry is
under intense pressure as more
states virtually wipe out cash
bail and financial firms look
for an exit from an increasingly
controversial profit center in
the criminal-justice system.
Most recently, private-eq-
uity firmEndeavour Capital
says it sold its stake in Califor-
nia-based Aladdin Bail Bonds,
one of the country’s largest
bail-bond providers. The move
came after Endeavour and its
investors faced pressure from
the American Civil Liberties
Union and others who say bail
is part of a justice system that
discriminates against minori-
ties and low-income defen-
dants.
Endeavour follows other
major financial firms that have
abandoned the bail-bond in-
dustry, amid falling revenues,
growing criticism from activ-
ists and an uncertain political
environment.Tokio Marine
HCC, a Houston-based insur-
ance company owned by
Japan’s Tokio Marine Holdings
Inc., said in April it was selling
Bail USA Inc., a bail-bond un-
derwriter, and no longer pro-
viding insurance for bail-bond
companies.Randall & Quilter
Investment HoldingsLtd., an
insurance company based in
Bermuda, said in a December
2018 financial report that it
was divesting itself of its U.S.
bail-bond business.
Endeavour didn’t respond to
questions about why it sold
Aladdin, and hasn’t disclosed
the buyer in the recent sale.
Aladdin and Randall &
Quilter didn’t respond to re-
quests to comment.
The decisions to exit bail-
bond companies come as the
industry enters a period of de-

BYLAURAKUSISTO

Bail-Bond Industry Loses Backers


Activist pressures and
justice-system shifts
prompting some firms
to abandon the field

The old San Francisco location of Aladdin Bail Bonds, one of the country’s largest bail-bond providers, this week.

IAN BATES FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Thebail-bondindustry
isshrinkingamid
regulatorychanges.

Total face amount of bail
bonds written

Source: AM Best

$

0

5

10

15

billion

2010 ’

$250,000 experienced a 10.3%
drop in inventory from a year
earlier in January. Meanwhile,
homes in the $250,000 to
$500,000 range saw inventory
fall 6%.
Amy Pearl, 54 years old, and
her 19-year-old college student
daughter, Grace, were looking
for a condominium in the Buf-
falo, N.Y., area this month.
When they found an apartment
they liked, in the suburb of
Williamsville, it was immedi-
ately off the market.
“It was Super Bowl Sunday,
so we were like ‘who’s going to
buy a house on Super Bowl
Sunday?’ But by Monday it was
gone,” Ms. Pearl said.
A few days later, they put in
an offer for a two-bedroom
unit in the same complex for
$94,000, and her daughter is
now in contract to buy it. Ms.

Pearl said her daughter will
live in the apartment with a
roommate, a cheaper option
than renting.
“We never thought we’d
move so quickly,” Ms. Pearl
said. “Things are just turning
really fast. You just have to be
ahead of the game.”
Recently, some signs have
emerged that more inventory
could be on the way. Residen-
tial permits, often a bellwether
for future home construction,
rose 9.2% in January from the
previous month, the Commerce
Department said Wednesday,
hitting a 13-year high.
A measure of U.S. home-
builder confidence remains
near a two-decade high, the
National Association of Home
Builders said Tuesday, despite
easing for the second straight
month in February.
While a lack of inventory is
hurting sales across much of
the country, the situation is
different in the South, Mr.
Frick said.
Existing-home sales in the
South increased 0.4% last
month and were up 11.7% com-
pared with a year earlier, ac-
cording to NAR.

U.S. home sales sputtered in
January, the latest sign that
some of the lowest interest
rates in half a century are fail-
ing to offset the high prices
and limited inventory keeping
many buyers on the sidelines.
Existing home sales fell 1.3%
in January compared with De-
cember at a seasonally ad-
justed annual rate of 5.46 mil-
lion, the National Association
of Realtors said Friday.
That compared with econo-
mists’ expectations for a 2%
decline last month.
Existing-home sales were up
9.6% in January from a year
earlier.
Despite rising incomes and
low mortgage rates, many buy-
ers are still struggling to find a
home for sale after a decade of
little new construction. NAR
said the housing inventory
level was the lowest for Janu-
ary since 1999.
“We’re stuck in this situa-
tion that will take us a few
years to dig out of,” said Rob-
ert Frick, corporate economist
at the Navy Federal Credit
Union. While a rise in new con-
struction and year-over-year
sales is encouraging, he said, it
will take awhile for supply to
catch up with demand.
A strong job market and low
interest rates aren’t providing
the impetus for home buying
that many economists have ex-
pected. The U.S. unemployment
rate was 3.6% in January, close
to a 50-year low. The average
interest rate on a 30-year fixed
mortgage was 3.62% in Janu-
ary, according to Freddie Mac,
well below the 4.46% in Janu-
ary 2019.
Now, some worry that slug-
gish home-sales activity and
fewer people moving could be-
comemoreofadragoneco-
nomic growth.
There was a 3.1-month sup-
ply of homes on the market at
the end of January compared
with 3.8 at the same time in
the previous year. Limited
housing stock has contributed
to higher home prices, with the
median sales price for an exist-
ing home in January up 6.8%
from the prior year at
$266,300.
Inventory has been tight at
the cheaper end of the market.
Homes priced from $100,000 to

BYKONRADPUTZIER
ANDWILLPARKER

Homes Sales Stumble


Amid Limited Supply


Sacramento Sues Over Water Access Rules


A strong job market
and low rates aren’t
providing the
impetus for buying.
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