The Wall.St Journal 21Feb2020

(Grace) #1

A2| Friday, February 21, 2020 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.


UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

President Apologizes
To Victims of Doctor

The president of the Univer-
sity of Michigan apologized on
Thursday to any victims of sex-
ual abuse by a now-deceased
doctor who worked for the
school for more than 30 years.
From 1968 until 2003 Dr.
Robert E. Anderson was a team
physician at the University of
Michigan’s athletic department
as well as the director of the
university’s health service. Five
of his former patients recently
reported that he committed sex-
ual misconduct during the 1970s
until 2002, school officials said.
A police investigation found
significant evidence of abuse. Dr.
Anderson died in 2008.
This week the school publicly
asked anyone who believes they
were subjected to sexual mis-
conduct during medical exams
by him to contact the school.
“On behalf of the university, I
apologize to anyone who was
harmed by Dr. Anderson,” Presi-
dent Mark Schlissel said to the
school’s board of regents.
—Douglas Belkin

CALIFORNIA

USC to Increase Aid,
End Tuition for Some

The University of Southern
California will phase in free tu-
ition for undergraduate students
from families with an annual in-
come of $80,000 or less, USC
President Carol L. Folt said
Thursday.
As part of the initiative, own-
ership of a home won’t be
counted in determining a stu-
dent’s financial need to attend
the Los Angeles private univer-
sity, where tuition and living ex-
penses top $77,000 annually.
“We’re opening the door wider
to make a USC education possi-
ble for talented students from all
walks of life,” Ms. Folt said.
The changes will be phased in
beginning with first-year students
entering USC in the fall of 2020
and the spring of 2021, USC said.
The university also said it
would increase undergraduate fi-
nancial aid by more than $30 mil-
lion annually.
—Associated Press

ECONOMY

USDA Sees Difficult
Year for Farmers

This year is shaping up as
another tough one for U.S. farm-
ers.
Despite trade deals in North
America and between the U.S.
and China, crop prices remain
subdued. The federal govern-
ment isn’t expected to step in
with fresh aid as it did last year.
The U.S. Department of Agri-
culture said Thursday that it ex-
pects farm debt in 2020 to rise
to a record $425 billion, up from
$415 billion last year. The debt-
to-asset ratio for farms remains
at its highest point in more than
15 years, the USDA said, and
farm bankruptcies jumped 24%
last year.
“The farm balance sheet re-
mains tight,” USDA chief econo-
mist Robert Johansson said.
Average corn prices are ex-
pected to drop 6% to $3.60 a
bushel this year, according to
the USDA, while soybean prices
are expected to rise 1% to an av-
erage $8.80 a bushel.
—Kirk Maltais

NEW ORLEANS

Woman Is Killed
By a Parade Float

New Orleans is mourning the
death of a woman who was run
over by a parade float as the
city celebrates the season lead-
ing up to Mardi Gras.
The Orleans Parish Coroner’s
Office identified the victim
Thursday as Geraldine Car-
mouche, 58 years old, of New
Orleans.
Ms. Carmouche apparently
tried to cross between two parts
of a tandem float, tripped over a
hitch connecting the sections
and was run over, witnesses told
news outlets. It happened
Wednesday night during the pa-
rade of the Mystic Krewe of Nyx,
an all-female Carnival group.
The parade was ended early,
and the rest of the floats were
diverted off the parade route.
“We are devastated over the
tragic event last night that re-
sulted in the death of a relative
of two Nyx sisters,” Krewe of
Nyx captain Julia Lea said.
—Associated Press

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Michael Bennett, head of
derivatives and structured fi-
nance at the World Bank, at
the Trading Risk conference in
New York in October said: “A
number of journalists and
bosses of mine have said, you
made a huge mistake” because
pandemic-catastrophe bonds
didn’t pay out for a 2019 Ebola
outbreak. A Business & Fi-
nance article Thursday about
the bonds and coronavirus in-
correctly quoted Mr. Bennett

as saying “a number of gov-
ernments and bosses of mine.”

A March 2, 2019, Exchange
article about the hottest and
coldest U.S. job markets mis-
stated the methodology for cal-
culating changes in employ-
ment and labor-force levels,
which were calculated based on
a 12-month average. The article
incorrectly said the changes
were for the fourth quarter of
2018 from a year earlier.

Readers can alert The Wall Street Journal to any errors in news articles by
[email protected] by calling 888-410-2667.

CORRECTIONSAMPLIFICATIONS


of criminal cases.
The judge said she was bas-
ing her sentence on those im-
posed in other comparable
cases, referencing the 30
months that I. Lewis “Scooter”
Libby, a former top aide to
Vice President Dick Cheney, re-
ceived for his 2007 conviction
of lying to a grand jury and
obstructing justice. Mr. Trump
pardoned Mr. Libby in 2018.
At the hearing, Assistant
U.S. Attorney John Crabb
backed the original recommen-
dations of prosecutors in calcu-
lating a guideline range, a de-
velopment that seemed to
minimize the Justice Depart-
ment’s second recommendation
calling for a lighter sentence.
Judge Jackson acknowl-
edged Mr. Stone’s history of
cultivating a public persona
as a provocateur and a prank-
ster. But she ruled that Mr.
Stone’s pretrial behavior—in-
cluding questioning the legiti-
macy of the proceedings and
posting online after being or-
dered not to—should be taken
into account.
She also chastised Mr.
Stone’s defense team for try-
ing to argue at trial that Mr.
Stone’s lies didn’t amount to
much, an argument they
boiled down to: “So what?”
“The truth still exists,” Judge
Jackson said, describing that
argument as the “most perni-
cious” aspect of the case.
Crowds began gathering
early Thursday at the federal
courthouse in Washington,
with cameras lining both en-
trances and Mr. Stone’s sup-
porters holding a banner out-
side the courthouse that asked

lower recommendation that
suggested the court could ap-
propriately discount several
additional levels of punish-
ment. That prompted the four
trial prosecutors to withdraw
from the case.
At the sentencing hearing,
Judge Jackson noted that it
was unusual for the govern-
ment not to argue for the
maximum sentence.
“The Department of Justice
and United States attorney’s
office is committed to enforc-
ing the law without fear, favor
or political influence,” said Mr.
Crabb. “This prosecution was
and is righteous.”
Mr. Trump’s criticism of Mr.
Stone’s prosecution centered
on one of the jurors in his
case, a woman who had previ-
ously run for Congress as a
Democrat. He called her “to-
tally tainted” on Thursday.
According to transcripts of
jury selection, Mr. Stone’s law-
yers asked the juror in ques-
tion about potential bias—in-
cluding Democratic politics—
but didn’t seek to exclude her
from the jury pool.
A federal jury convicted Mr.
Stone of lying to Congress in
its investigation of Russian
election interference and mis-
leading lawmakers about his
efforts to make contact with
WikiLeaks, which published
emails stolen from Democrats
that jolted the 2016 campaign.
He was also convicted of tam-
pering with a witness, Randy
Credico, a New York comedian
who had evidence to contra-
dict Mr. Stone.
—Rebecca Ballhaus
contributed to this article.

sentence. “I’m going to watch
the process...and at some point
I’m going to make a recom-
mendation.” His comments
marked a sharp shift from two
days earlier, when he said he
hadn’t given “any thought” to
pardoning Mr. Stone.
Mr. Stone, a Republican
consultant who has known Mr.
Trump for decades, was con-
victed in November in a case
that resulted from former spe-
cial counsel Robert Mueller’s
investigation of Russian inter-
ference in the 2016 election
and any ties between Russia
and the Trump campaign.
The sentence was far less
than the seven to nine years
that trial prosecutors had ini-
tially recommended under
federal guidelines before At-
torney General William Barr
and other senior officials
overruled their recommenda-
tion and suggested a lighter
punishment.
Judge Jackson said follow-
ing the guidelines would result
in a sentence that “would be
greater than necessary,” but
criticized what she described
as the Justice Department’s
“unprecedented” reversal. She
said prosecutors were right to
endorse a guideline sentence,
as they do in the vast majority

ContinuedfromPageOne

Stone Gets


More Than


Three Years


Mr. Trump to #PardonRoger-
Stone and another group with
a two-story inflatable rat.
Mr. Stone declined to speak
at the hearing. The flamboyant
Republican operative won’t
have to start serving his sen-
tence until after Judge Jack-
son rules on his request for a
new trial. She hasn’t specified
when that will occur.
His defense attorneys ar-
gued that his age, lack of crim-
inal history and involvement
in charitable causes warranted
a sentence of probation.
Given the lack of criminal

history, the judge calculated
the recommended sentence at
5.8 to 7.25 years in prison.
Judges often depart from
those guidelines. The guide-
lines suggested that Mr.
Trump’s former campaign
chairman, Paul Manafort, for
example, faced around 20 years
in prison for financial crimes
including tax fraud, but he was
ultimately sentenced to a total
of around 7½ years in prison.
In the Stone case, prosecu-
tors filed their initial recom-
mendation last week based on
those guidelines. Mr. Trump
said their recommendation
was “horrible and very unfair.”
Within hours, senior Justice
Department officials ordered a

Trump leaves door
open to granting
clemency to former
political adviser.

To get a clemency case on a
president’s desk, it often comes
down to who you know. That
dynamic is even more acute in
the current White House.
President Trump granted a
series of pardons and sentence
commutations this week, a list
that featured high-profile
cases involving political cor-
ruption and corporate greed
as well as more routine drug
and fraud charges. In the 11
cases, Mr. Trump leaned on
advice from friends and allies,
as well as a woman he freed
from prison in a previous
clemency round.
“I really rely on the recom-
mendations of people that
know them,” the president
told reporters Tuesday in ex-
plaining his decisions.
On Thursday, at a Hope for
Prisoners event for former in-
mates re-entering society, Mr.
Trump asked the crowd for

their own recommendations,
and signaled he was open to
clemency for confidant Roger
Stone, who was sentenced to
three years and four months
in prison for lying to Congress
and other crimes.
“I love doing it. You can be
poor, you can be middle income,
you can be rich, injustice is in-
justice,” Mr. Trump said.
Past presidents also took on
recommendations from allies,
and like Mr. Trump faced fire
for controversial decisions.
But the personal nature of Mr.
Trump’s clemency announce-
ments, and the fluidity of his
approach, at times bypassing
traditional Justice Department
processes, differentiates him.
“Obviously, being able to
make your case to the presi-
dent is an advantage because
he’s a very hands-on decision
maker,” said Matt Schlapp, a
Republican consultant who
serves as chairman of the
American Conservative Union.

He advocated on behalf of Da-
vid Safavian, a former govern-
ment official convicted of
making false statements, who
was pardoned by Mr. Trump.
Under the traditional pro-
cess, the Justice Department’s
Office of the Pardon Attorney
offers recommendations to the
White House, though the final
decision rests with the presi-
dent. The department doesn’t
discuss any private delibera-
tions with the White House. For
some time, Trump advisers
have been reviewing ways to
revise the clemency process,
possibly giving the White
House more control, said a per-
son familiar with those talks.
Clemency is the broader
term that includes both par-
dons and commutations.
Critics argue that the presi-
dent’s approach unfairly ad-
vantages the well-connected.
“It is the mingling of his self
interest and the presidency
that has permeated his whole

term,” said Noah Bookbinder of
the advocacy group Citizens
for Responsibility and Ethics in
Washington. “It seems to be a
case of putting the views and
wishes of people with unusual
access to the president and of-
ten financial ties to the presi-
dent, ahead of regular people.”
Under the Constitution,
presidents have power to par-
don and commute sentences
related to federal crimes. Other
presidents have made contro-
versial choices, based on
friendships or other relation-
ships, but often waited until
right before leaving office to
minimize the political fallout.
White House officials ac-
knowledge that Mr. Trump has
his own approach and says the
president is focused on correct-
ing what he sees as excessive
sentencing. Some cases, such as
that of former Illinois Gov. Rod
Blagojevich, were highlighted on
FoxNews,Mr.Trump’spre-
ferred cable channel.

BYCATHERINELUCEY

Connections Drive Clemency Moves


U.S. NEWS


of a Montana man who testi-
fied that the doctor had sexu-
ally abused him. “They’re just
going to learn how to hide
stuff better.”
The IHS, which provides
health care to 2.6 million Na-
tive Americans, commissioned
Integritas Creative Solutions
LLC to do the review soon after
an investigation by The Wall
Street Journal and the PBS se-
ries Frontline showed agency
officials had missed warning
signs, punished whistleblowers
and—despite their suspicions—
transferred the pedophile,
Stanley Patrick Weber, from
one reservation to another be-
fore he retired in May 2016.
Weber was sentenced to
five lifetime prison terms last
week, following convictions for

sexually abusing six boys on
two reservations. Days later,
court records revealed another
IHS doctor had been indicted
on charges of sexually abusing
adult women at a different
South Dakota government hos-
pital, ratcheting up pressure
on the agency to publicly ad-
dress abuse at its facilities.
Lawyers for the doctors de-
clined to comment or didn’t
respond to inquiries.
The Integritas investigators
gathered a detailed account of
how specific IHS officials ig-
nored explicit warnings—in-
cluding in one case, a state
medical board investigation of
Weber—allowing him to con-
tinue practicing, and how con-
cerns about the doctor
spread more widely across the

agency earlier than previously
known, according to people fa-
miliar with the matter.
Last month, the IHS said
that it is committed to trans-
parency, but that records such
as the report “are protected
from public disclosure.” In a
statement Thursday, the IHS
cited a broad interpretation of
the law it says requires it to
withhold the report.
Integritas won its contract
in May and finished the work
in January, according to con-
tracting records and people fa-
miliar with the matter.
The IHS claim that the re-
cords can’t be disclosed hinges
on a 2010 law that makes re-
cords of IHS “medical quality
assurance programs” and
“medical treatment review

committees” confidential and
privileged. It is an interpreta-
tion some legal experts ques-
tion.
Most states have secrecy
laws for such records, but they
usually apply only to clinical
reviews of the sort conducted
by peer groups, said William
Maruca, a health-care attorney
at Fox Rothschild LLP. “This
protection was created to en-
courage candor in physician
self-policing,” he said.
The IHS said that a court
had found the statute protect-
ing its quality assurance re-
cords is far broader.
The Bozeman, Mont.-based
Integritas team includes for-
mer law-enforcement officers
who don’t appear to have any
medical or health-care quality-

assurance experience. Carl
Caulk, Integritas’s leader,
didn’t respond to inquiries.
An IHS spokeswoman said
the agency “is in discussions
about publicly releasing a
summary of the report and
will...announce its plans soon.”
The kinds of details in the
full report that don’t make the
summary could be valuable
when communities are grap-
pling with the role former IHS
officials—some still in posi-
tions in which they are en-
trusted with the safety of chil-
dren—played in the scandal.
“We deserve to know which
of our people failed to protect
those boys,” said Pauletta Red
Willow, a social worker on the
Pine Ridge reservation in
South Dakota.

The U.S. Indian Health Ser-
vice says it can’t disclose a re-
port that identifies the officials
responsible for mishandling a
government pediatrician who
abused Native American boys
for decades, citing a law meant
to protect medical reviews.
That stance has angered rel-
atives of the pediatrician’s vic-
tims, tribal members and for-
mer agency employees who
hoped the report would pro-
vide a public reckoning and
greater accountability for those
who didn’t do enough to pro-
tect Native American children.
“I don’t think they want
change, or are capable of it,”
said Chris Boy, the stepfather

BYCHRISTOPHERWEAVER
ANDDANFROSCH

U.S. Agency Won’t Release Abuse Report


U.S. WATCH


Former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s sentence for corruption was commuted by President Trump this week.

SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES

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