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  • MIL-OSI Security: Pacific Partnership 2024-2 Visits Lelu Elementary School [Image 2 of 11]

    Source: United States Navy (Logistics Group Western Pacific)

    Issued by: on


    KOSRAE, Federated States of Micronesia (Sept. 18, 2024) – U.S. Navy Musician 1st Class Paul Thompson, from Philadelphia, with the Pacific Partnership 2024-2 Band, Pau Hana Sound, plays a bass guitar for students during a school engagement at Lelu Elementary School in Kosrae, Federated States of Micronesia, Sept. 18, 2024. Now in its 20th iteration, the Pacific Partnership series is the largest annual multinational humanitarian assistance and disaster relief preparedness mission conducted in the Indo-Pacific. Pacific Partnership works collaboratively with host and partner nations to enhance regional interoperability and disaster response capabilities, increase security and stability in the region, and foster new and enduring friendships in the Indo-Pacific. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Gavin Arnoldhendershot)

    Date Taken: 09.18.2024
    Date Posted: 09.26.2024 15:35
    Photo ID: 8663446
    VIRIN: 240918-N-RM312-1213
    Resolution: 5176×3697
    Size: 2.14 MB
    Location: KOSRAE, FM

    Web Views: 1
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    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Muskegon County Man Charged in Bomb Hoax

    Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime Alerts (b)

    Threat disrupted Caribbean cruise

              GRAND RAPIDS – U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Michigan Mark Totten today announced that Joshua Darrell Lowe II, 19, of Bailey, Michigan, was indicted on criminal charges related to an alleged bomb hoax.

              “We take every threat of mass violence seriously,” said U.S. Attorney Mark Totten. “Hoaxes can endanger lives, incur needless costs, and divert public safety resources needed to address real threats. My office has zero tolerance for wrongdoers who intentionally convey false and misleading information that prompts a law enforcement response.”

              In January 2024, Carnival Cruise Lines received an e-mail warning, “Hey, I think someone might have a bomb on your sunrise cruise ship.” The cruise ship, Sunrise, had just departed Miami, Florida with a full complement of passengers and crew, and was sailing toward Jamaica as part of a Caribbean cruise. As a result of the message, the ship’s personnel individually searched over a thousand staterooms. Carnival alerted the U.S. Coast Guard and Jamaican authorities, whose Marine Police escorted the ship to port. According to court documents, Lowe is charged with making a false bomb threat.

              “Bomb threats are not a laughing matter and are extremely irresponsible,” said Cheyvoryea Gibson, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI in Michigan. “When individuals make false hoax threats, they divert critical law enforcement resources and spread unnecessary fear. The FBI takes all threats to life seriously and will ensure that those who resort to this kind of intimidation face the appropriate consequences.”

              If convicted, Lowe faces a penalty of up to five years in prison and will be required to pay restitution for expenses associated with the hoax.

              The Federal Bureau of Investigation is investigating this case, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Nils Kessler is prosecuting it.

              The charges in an indictment are merely accusations, and a defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty.

    # # #

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Activity in the U.S. Attorney’s Office Recent Sentencings

    Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime Alerts (b)

    Crimes on Public Lands

    Curtis Jeffery, age 27, from Socorro, New Mexico, was sentenced to 10 days incarceration with credit for 3 days served for assaulting a Xanterra co-worker by pushing her head into a wall. He was also convicted of a second count of assault on a second individual and being under the influence of alcohol to a degree that rendered him a danger to others. In addition to the term of incarceration he was sentenced to five years of unsupervised probation. His terms of probation include that he not be permitted to enter Yellowstone National Park during his term of probation. U.S. Magistrate Judge Stephanie A. Hambrick imposed the sentence on Sept. 11, in Mammoth. Assistant U.S. Attorney Ariel C. Calmes prosecuted the case.

    Clarence Yoder, 40, from Idaho Falls, Idaho, pleaded guilty to three separate charges last week. The first offense was for intentionally disturbing bison for which he was sentenced to a ten-day term of incarceration with credit for two days served and was fined $3,000. He also pleaded guilty to being under the influence of alcohol to a degree that rendered him a danger to himself and others and was fined $200. Finally, he pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct and was fined $250. Yoder was placed on two years of unsupervised probation. He is not permitted to enter Yellowstone National Park during his term of probation. U.S. Magistrate Judge Stephanie A. Hambrick imposed the sentence on Sept. 10, in Mammoth. Assistant U.S. Attorney Ariel C. Calmes prosecuted the case. 

    Drug Trafficking

    Christopher Isgrigg, 38, of  Cheyenne, Wyoming was sentenced to 120 months’ imprisonment with five years of supervised release for possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine. According to court documents, on March 11, 2024, Cheyenne Police Department conducted a traffic stop on a Ford sedan belonging to the driver identified as Isgrigg. During the traffic stop, another officer arrived on scene with his narcotics certified canine which alerted to the presence of controlled substances inside the vehicle. Approximately 600 grams of methamphetamine and 34.2 grams of suspected fentanyl pills were located inside sedan. Isgrigg was indicted on May 16, pleaded guilty on July 2, and U.S. District Court Judge Kelly H. Rankin imposed the sentence on Sept. 19. The Drug Enforcement Administration and Cheyenne Police Department investigated the crime. Assistant U.S. Attorney Timothy J. Forwood prosecuted the case. Case No. 24-0060

    Bank Robbery

    Roosevelt Rashaud Keys, 27, of Houston, Texas, was sentenced to 27 months for bank robbery and aiding and abetting, with three years of supervised release. According to court documents, on Oct. 14, 2023, an ATM robbery occurred at a financial institution in Jackson, Wyoming. Several male hooded and masked subjects stole ATM cash cassettes containing U.S. currency while a service repair technician was attempting to repair the ATM. Keys was later stopped for a traffic violation and the deputy was able to gain his personal information, travel plans, and rental car agreement. Further investigation determined that Keys and his vehicle matched the description of one of the bank robbers. Keys was ultimately arrested in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on unrelated charges. A search warrant was authorized for Keys’ cell phone and revealed photographs taken on Oct. 14, 2023 showing Keys with bundles of U.S. Currency. Senior U.S. District Court Judge Nancy D. Freudenthal imposed the sentence on Sept. 12, in Cheyenne. The FBI and Jackson Police department investigated the crime. Assistant U.S. Attorney Timothy W. Gist prosecuted the case. Case No. 24-00019

    llegal Re-entry of a Previously Deported Alien

    Isamar Tellez-Blancas, 24, of Tlaxacala, Mexico, was sentenced to time served plus 10 days to allow for deportation proceedings, for illegal entry into the United States. According to court documents, on Feb. 12, Tellez-Blancas was arrested by Teton County Sheriff’s Office for driving under the influence of alcohol, no driver’s license, and unauthorized use of a vehicle. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) was contacted. A Deportation Officer processed the defendant and obtained fingerprints matching pre-existing fingerprints in their database indicating Tellez-Blancas was in the U.S. illegally. ICE investigated the crime. Assistant U.S. Attorney Cameron J. Cook prosecuted the case. U.S. District Court Judge Alan B. Johnson imposed the sentence on Sept. 4. Case No. 24-CR-00109

    Hilario Mendoza-Rodriguez, 39, of San Luis Potosi, Mexico, was sentenced to time served for illegal entry into the United States. According to court documents, on July 13, 2023, Mendoza-Rodriguez was arrested by the Rock Springs Police Department for assault and battery causing injury. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) was contacted. A Deportation Officer processed the defendant and obtained fingerprints matching pre-existing fingerprints in their database indicating Mendoza-Rodriguez was in the U.S. illegally. ICE investigated the crime. Assistant U.S. Attorney Cameron J. Cook prosecuted the case. Chief U.S. District Court Judge Scott W. Skavdahl imposed the sentence on Sept. 19. Case No. 24-CR-00036

    About the United States Attorney’s Office 

    The United States Attorney’s Office is responsible for representing the federal government in virtually all litigation involving the United States in the District of Wyoming, including all criminal prosecutions for violations of federal law, civil lawsuits brought by or against the government, and actions to collect judgments and restitution on behalf of victims and taxpayers. The Office is involved in several programs designed to make our communities safer. They include: 

    Environmental Justice
    The fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color, national origin, or income with respect to the development, implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and policies.

    Project Safe Childhood
    Project Safe Childhood (PSC) is a DOJ initiative that combats the proliferation of technology-facilitated sexual exploitation crimes against children. The threat of sexual predators soliciting children for sexual contact is well-known and serious.

    Project Safe Neighborhoods
    Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN) is a nationwide commitment to reducing gun and gang crime in America by networking existing local programs that target gun crime and providing these programs with additional tools necessary to be successful.

    Victim Witness Assistance
    The Victim Witness Coordinator for the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Wyoming is dedicated to making sure that victims of federal crimes and their family members are treated with compassion, fairness, and respect.

    To report a federal crime, go to: https://www.justice.gov/actioncenter/report-crime#trafficking

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Acadia Healthcare Company Inc. to Pay $19.85M to Settle Allegations Relating to Medically Unnecessary Inpatient Behavioral Health Services

    Source: United States Attorneys General 13

    Acadia Healthcare Company Inc., a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Franklin, Tennessee, has agreed to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act and related state statutes by knowingly billing for medically unnecessary inpatient behavioral health services or for services that did not meet federal and state regulations. Acadia Healthcare Company owns and operates inpatient behavioral health facilities throughout the United States, including The Pavilion at HealthPark LLC, doing business as Park Royal Hospital in Ft. Myers, Florida; Riverwoods Behavioral Health LLC, doing business as Lakeview Behavioral Health in Norcross, Georgia, and as Riverwoods Behavioral Health System in Riverdale, Georgia; Ten Broeck Tampa LLC, doing business as North Tampa Behavioral Health in Wesley Chapel, Florida; PHC of Michigan LLC, doing business as Harbor Oaks Hospital in New Baltimore, Michigan; and Seven Hills Hospital LLC, doing business as Seven Hills Hospital in Henderson, Nevada (collectively, Acadia).

    The United States contended that, between 2014 and 2017, Acadia knowingly submitted false claims for payment to Medicare, Medicaid and TRICARE for inpatient behavioral health services that were not reasonable or medically necessary. In particular, the United States contended that Acadia admitted beneficiaries who were not eligible for inpatient treatment and failed to properly discharge beneficiaries when they no longer needed inpatient treatment and had improper and excessive lengths of stay. The United States further alleged that Acadia knowingly failed to provide adequate staffing, training and/or supervision of staff, which resulted in assaults, elopements, suicides and other harm resulting from these staffing failures. In addition, Acadia allegedly failed to provide inpatient acute care in accord with federal and state regulations, including, but not limited to, by failing to provide active treatment, to develop and/or update individualized assessments and treatment plans, to provide adequate discharge planning and to provide required individual and group therapy.

    Under the settlement agreement, Acadia will pay $16,663,918 to the United States to resolve its liability under the False Claims Act for its allegedly false Medicare, Medicaid and TRICARE billings. The Medicaid program is jointly funded by the states and the federal government, and pursuant to separate settlement agreements, Acadia will pay an additional $3,186,082 to Florida, Georgia, Michigan and Nevada to resolve their state law claims against Acadia.  

    “This settlement demonstrates the Justice Department’s commitment to ensuring that federal healthcare programs pay only for services that are needed and properly provided,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Brian M. Boynton, head of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “It is particularly important that health care providers satisfy these requirements when providing services to a vulnerable patient population, such as residents of an inpatient behavioral health facility.”

    “Federal health care programs rely upon the honesty and credibility of participating providers,” said U.S. Attorney Roger B. Handberg for the Middle District of Florida. “The Justice Department will hold accountable those who seek to exploit these programs for personal gain, jeopardizing the health of patients.”

    “Medical providers who participate in federally funded health care programs must follow the law when billing Medicare, Medicaid and Tricare,” said Special Agent in Charge Tamala E. Miles of the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG). “This settlement illustrates HHS-OIG’s commitment to protecting the integrity of these taxpayer-funded programs and the well-being of enrollees seeking treatment. Working closely with the United States Attorney’s Office and other law enforcement partners, we will continue to thoroughly investigate such fraudulent billing schemes.”

    “Billing TRICARE for medically unnecessary inpatient behavioral health services or for services that did not meet federal and state regulations impacts our ability to reimburse providers in a timely manner for care that is needed to keep our military ready to defend the nation,” said Rear Admiral Matthew Case of the U.S. Navy and Acting Assistant Director for Health Care Administration for the Defense Health Agency. “We thank our state and federal partners for their work on this case, and the whistleblowers who came forward for their bravery. As a result, we are able to continue delivering one of the most comprehensive and affordable health benefits available to any American.”

    The settlement includes the resolution of claims brought under the qui tam or whistleblower provisions of the False Claims Act by Franka Tirado, Brian Snyder and Jamie Thompson, all former employees of Acadia. Under those provisions, a private party can file an action on behalf of the United States and receive a portion of any recovery. The qui tam cases are captioned U.S. ex rel. Tirado, et al. v. Park Royal Hospital et al., Case No. 2:17-cv-201-FtM-99 (MDFL), and U.S. ex rel. Thompson v. Acadia Healthcare Company Inc., et al., Case No. 2:18-cv-543-FtM-38CM (MDFL). The whistleblower share of the federal portion of the settlement will be $3,166,144.42.

    The resolution obtained in this matter was the result of a coordinated effort between the Civil Division’s Commercial Litigation Branch, Fraud Section, and U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida, as well as the National Association of Medicaid Fraud Control Units, with assistance from HHS-OIG and the Department of Defense Criminal Investigative Service.

    The investigation and resolution of this matter illustrates the government’s emphasis on combating health care fraud. One of the most powerful tools in this effort is the False Claims Act. Tips and complaints from all sources about potential fraud, waste, abuse and mismanagement can be reported to HHS at 800-HHS-TIPS (800-447-8477).

    Senior Trial Counsel Sarah Arni of the Civil Division’s Fraud Section and former Senior Litigation Counsel Lindsay Griffin for the Middle District of Florida handled the matter.

    The claims resolved by the settlements are allegations only. There has been no determination of liability.

    Settlement

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Two Russian Nationals Charged in Connection with Operating Billion Dollar Money Laundering Services

    Source: United States Attorneys General 13

    The Justice Department today announced actions coordinated with the Department of State, Department of the Treasury, and other federal and international law enforcement partners to combat Russian money laundering operations. The actions involved the unsealing of an indictment charging a Russian national with his involvement in operating multiple money laundering services that catered to cybercriminals, as well as the seizure of websites associated with three illicit cryptocurrency exchanges.

    “Today’s actions highlight the Department’s continued disruption of malicious cyber actors and their criminal ecosystem,” said Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco. “The two Russian nationals charged today allegedly pocketed millions of dollars from prolific money laundering and fueled a network of cyber criminals around the world, with Ivanov allegedly facilitating darknet drug traffickers and ransomware operators. Working with our Dutch partners, we shut down Cryptex, an illicit crypto exchange and recovered millions of dollars in cryptocurrency.”

    “Every step cybercriminals take in their pursuit of money leaves another track that leads us to their doorstep,” said U.S. Attorney Jessica D. Aber for the Eastern District of Virginia. “And if you follow them on their path of greed, they will lead us to you. We will not stop, because while domains can always be seized, justice is unyielding.”

    “The Secret Service is relentless in pursuing those engaged in criminal activity,” said Assistant Director Brian Lambert of the U.S. Secret Service. “I thank our domestic and foreign partners for their efforts on this case, as we continue our work bringing to justice those engaged in transnational criminal activity.”

    According to court documents unsealed today in the Eastern District of Virginia, Russian national Sergey Ivanov, known online as “Taleon,” among other aliases, was charged with one count of conspiracy to commit and aid and abet bank fraud for providing payment processing support to the carding website Rescator, and one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering for laundering proceeds from the carding website Joker’s Stash. “Carding” is the unlawful acquisition of and trade in stolen credit and debit card information for fraudulent purposes. Ivanov allegedly operated for nearly two decades as a professional cyber money launderer, advertising his services to other cybercriminals on exclusive Russian-speaking criminal forums. Over the years, Ivanov’s laundering services and payment systems have catered to cybercrime marketplaces, ransomware groups, and hackers responsible for significant data breaches of major U.S. companies.

    Ivanov allegedly created and/or operated Russian payment and exchange services UAPS, PinPays, and PM2BTC, which provided money transfer and laundering services directly to criminals. Cryptocurrency blockchain analysis revealed that between July 12, 2013, and Aug. 10, cryptocurrency addresses associated with Ivanov’s alleged money laundering services conducted transactions totaling approximately $1.15 billion in value. Approximately 32% of all traced bitcoin sent to these addresses originated from other cryptocurrency addresses associated with criminal activity. For example, more than $158 million of bitcoin flowing into Ivanov’s addresses allegedly represented fraud proceeds, more than $8.8 million allegedly represented proceeds from known ransomware payments, and approximately $4.7 million allegedly originated from darknet drug markets. The U.S. Secret Service has obtained court authorization to seize domains associated with the UAPS and PM2BTC websites.

    The Rescator carding website allegedly sold stolen payment card data from U.S. financial institutions and personally identifiable information (PII) of U.S. citizens. For example, the website allegedly advertised the sale of data from up to 40 million payment cards and the PII of approximately 70 million people that had been stolen from a major U.S. retail victim in 2013. The breach cost the U.S. retail victim at least $202 million in expenses and caused damage to the U.S. retail victim’s customers, who became targets of identity theft by other cybercriminals. Ivanov allegedly provided payment processing support for the Rescator carding site through the UAPS and PinPays services for purchases made on the site using bitcoin.

    Additionally, Russian national Timur Shakhmametov, known online as “JokerStash” and “Vega,” among other aliases, is charged in the same indictment with one count of conspiracy to commit and aid and abet bank fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit access device fraud, and one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering related to his work in operating the carding website Joker’s Stash and laundering the proceeds. Joker’s Stash offered for sale data from approximately 40 million payment cards annually, totaling hundreds of millions of payment cards overall, and was one of the largest known carding markets in history. Estimates of its profits range from $280 million to more than $1 billion. Shakhmametov and others allegedly promoted Joker’s Stash and its products by advertising the Joker’s Stash website and its stolen payment card data on numerous online cybercrime forums.

    Separately, the U.S. Secret Service executed a seizure order from the District of Maryland against two website domain names used to support the cryptocurrency money laundering exchange “Cryptex.net.” According to court records unsealed today, Cryptex.net and Cryptex.one were associated with the administration and operation of Cryptex, which offers complete anonymity to Cryptex users by allowing them to register for accounts without providing know-your-customer compliance requirements. Like UAPS and PM2BTC, Cryptex advertised itself directly to cybercriminals.

    According to a company that provides blockchain analytics services to law enforcement, there have been more than 37,500 transactions involving bitcoin addresses associated with Cryptex, amounting to a total value of approximately 62,586 bitcoin, or $1.4 billion at the time the transactions were made. Of that amount, about 31% of the bitcoin sent, or $441 million, originated from cryptocurrency addresses associated with criminal conduct, including $297 million of fraud proceeds and more than $115 million of proceeds from ransomware payments. Nine percent of all bitcoin sent to Cryptex, or $162 million, originated from cryptocurrency addresses associated with services often used by cybercriminals. Further, 28% of all bitcoin sent from Cryptex was sent to companies or darknet markets sanctioned by the United States.

    The seizure of these domains by the government will prevent the owners and third parties from using the sites for money laundering. Individuals visiting those sites now will see a message indicating that the site has been seized by the federal government.

    As part of the coordinated actions taken today, our Dutch partners seized the servers hosting PM2BTC and Cryptex. Those servers have been taken offline at various locations around the world, and the Dutch have seized cryptocurrency from those servers worth over $7 million.

    In coordination with the department’s actions, other U.S. government agencies and foreign law enforcement partners are also taking related actions. The U.S. Department of State issued reward offers up to $11 million through its Transnational Organized Crime Rewards Program for information leading to the arrest and/or conviction of Ivanov and others involved in the operation of his money laundering services, and for Shakhmametov and others involved in the operation of Joker’s Stash. Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued an order that identifies PM2BTC as being of “primary money laundering concern” in connection with Russian illicit finance. Concurrently, Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned Cryptex and Ivanov.

    The U.S. Secret Service Cyber Investigative Section is investigating the case.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Zoe Bedell for the Eastern District of Virginia is prosecuting the case against Ivanov and Shakhmametov. Trial Attorney Jeff Pearlman and Senior Counsel Jessica Peck of the Criminal Division’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Sullivan of the District of Maryland are handling the investigation into Cryptex. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs also provided assistance in these matters.

    The Netherlands Police, Dutch Fiscal Information and Investigation Service, the International Cooperation Department of the Central Criminal Police of the State Police of Latvia, Europol, the National Cyber-Forensics & Training Alliance, the German Federal Criminal Police Office, and the UK National Crime Agency provided invaluable assistance.

    The text of FinCEN’s order can be found here.

    For more information on the individuals and entities that OFAC designated today, click here.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Justice Department Announces New Resources to Improve Firearm Background Checks and Reduce Gun Violence

    Source: United States Attorneys General 13

    The Justice Department today announced several actions to improve firearm background checks and reduce gun violence. The Department is releasing model legislation and information that would help states permit the sharing of juvenile criminal history and mental health records with the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), solely for the purpose of conducting firearm background checks. In addition, the Department is announcing significant new grant funding for gun violence prevention, totaling over $200 million. Finally, the Department is unveiling new resources for law enforcement across the country, including training and funding guidance.

    “The Department of Justice is committed to doing everything in its power to combat gun violence and save lives,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “Today’s actions are a continuation of our efforts to fully implement the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, to provide critical funding to community violence intervention programs, and to assist our state and local partners as they work day in and day out to drive down gun crime.”

    Under the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act of 2022 (BSCA), NICS is required to contact state and local law enforcement entities to determine if a purchaser under 21 years of age is prohibited from purchasing a firearm. However, as part of established juvenile justice and mental health systems, some states and territories have important laws in place which restrict the sharing of juvenile mental health and/or criminal history records, so that youthful mistakes do not follow young people into adulthood.

    At the same time, these protections may prevent jurisdictions from providing the FBI with potentially disqualifying juvenile records when an enhanced background check is conducted. The model legislation released today, following in the example of several states that have appropriately and narrowly amended their record-sharing laws, provides a template for states that wish to permit greater information-sharing with NICS for the sole purpose of responding to a federal enhanced background check, thereby advancing public safety. In addition, the Justice Department is also releasing today information on state laws around the country, including whether they permit information-sharing with regard to juvenile records for enhanced background checks.

    Additionally, the Justice Department is also announcing two major rounds of grant funding designed to reduce and prevent gun violence. First, the Department is announcing an additional $85 million in funding through the Office of Justice Programs Community Violence Intervention and Prevention Initiative (CVIPI). This funding will help 30 agencies and organizations develop and expand their community violence intervention work, including hospital-based violence intervention, street outreach, and cognitive behavioral therapy, and will support training and technical assistance plus rigorous research to help grow the evidence base for violence intervention models. Second, the Department is announcing over $135 million in formula awards to 48 states under the Byrne State Crisis Intervention Program (Byrne SCIP), which provides funding for the implementation of extreme risk protection order programs, state crisis intervention court proceedings, and related programs/initiatives.

    Moreover, the Justice Department is committed to supporting implementation of the recommendations from the Critical Incident Report (CIR) on the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas. These implementation efforts include a suite of resources to not only support the local community of Uvalde, but also to serve as a resource across the country, particularly for local, rural, and regional agencies serving their communities. Today, the Department’s Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) office is releasing a Tenets of Training Checklist to assist law enforcement executives and training personnel in enhancing relevant training and a Resource Webpage tailored to the needs of Small and Rural agencies. This fall, DOJ will release a Self-Assessment Tool to help communities assess how well they are implementing the recommendations in the CIR and an Implementation and Resource Guide to identify resources and generally accepted practices and standards in the CIR. Additional resources will be released on a continual basis to continue to support law enforcement agencies and their communities.

    The COPS Office Collaborative Reform Initiative Technical Assistance Center (CRI-TAC) is also launching a renewed focus on assisting small and rural law enforcement agencies. Small and rural agencies will continue to have access to the no-cost training and technical assistance that CRI-TAC is known for, but now CRI-TAC will provide training and technical assistance opportunities geared for the unique challenges confronting small and rural policing agencies. Through the Small and Rural Agency Initiative, agencies will be able to participate in training programs addressing areas such as active assailant response, multi-jurisdictional coordination, community partnerships, resource allocation, addressing hate crimes, report writing, duty to intervene, and crash re-construction.

    Model Legislation to Remove Barriers to Completing Enhanced Background Checks (PDF)

    States’ Legal Ability to Provide Juvenile Information

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Justice Department Finds Civil Rights Violations by the City of Lexington, Mississippi, and the Lexington Police Department

    Source: United States Attorneys General 13

    Note: View the findings report here.

    Following a comprehensive investigation, the Justice Department announced today that the City of Lexington, Mississippi (City), and Lexington Police Department (LPD) engage in a pattern or practice of conduct that deprives people of their rights under the U.S. Constitution and federal law. Lexington is a town of approximately 1,200 people, located about an hour outside of Jackson, Mississippi.

    Specifically, the Justice Department finds that LPD unlawfully

    • Arrests, jails and detains people who cannot pay fines or fees, without assessing their ability to pay;
    • Uses excessive force;
    • Conducts stops, searches and arrests without probable cause, including jailing people on illegal “investigative holds” and arresting people solely because they owe outstanding fines;
    • Imposes money bail without justification or assessment of ability to pay;
    • Jails people without prompt access to court;
    • Violates the rights of people engaged in free speech and expression, including by retaliating against people who criticize the police;
    • Discriminates against Black people; and
    • Operates under an unconstitutional conflict of interest because LPD’s funding depends on the money it raises through its enforcement.

    “Today’s findings show that the Lexington Police Department abandoned its sacred position of trust in the community by routinely violating the constitutional rights of those it was sworn to protect,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “The Justice Department’s investigation uncovered that Lexington police officers have engaged in a pattern or practice of discriminating against the city’s Black residents, used excessive force, and retaliated against those who criticize them. Additionally, Lexington’s approach to fines and fees — including unlawfully arresting, jailing, and detaining people based on their failure to pay money without assessing if they can afford to do so — has been devastating for its residents. Being poor is not a crime, but practices like these amount to punishing people for poverty. People in that community deserve better, and the Justice Department is committed to working with them, the City, and the Police Department to make the City safer for all its citizens.”

    “Public safety depends on public confidence in our justice system,” said Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco. “The Lexington Police Department’s incarceration of individuals because they could not afford to pay fines — as detailed in today’s findings report — undermined that confidence and violated the civil rights of Lexington residents. I’m grateful to the Civil Rights Division for its thorough investigation and continued work to address these findings.”

    “Lexington is a small, rural community but its police department has had a heavy hand in people’s lives, wreaking havoc through use of excessive force, racially discriminatory policing, retaliation, and more. In every corner of our country, police officers must respect people’s constitutional rights and treat people with dignity,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “After an extensive review, we found that police officers in Lexington routinely make illegal arrests, use brutal and unnecessary force, and punish people for their poverty — including by jailing people who cannot afford to pay fines or money bail. For too long, the Lexington Police Department has been playing by its own rules and operating with impunity — it’s time for this to end. Our findings report furthers the Justice Department’s commitment to ensuring fairness and the rule of law.”

    “Police have the authority to enforce the law, not to act as debt collectors for the City, extracting payments from the poor with threats of jail,” said U.S. Attorney Todd Gee for the Southern District of Mississippi. “No matter how large or small, every police department has an obligation to follow the Constitution.”

    Based on the department’s investigation, over the past two years, LPD has made nearly one arrest for every four people in town, primarily for low-level offenses and traffic violations. That is more than 10 times the per capita arrest rate for Mississippi as a whole. Many of these arrests were for non-criminal conduct, like owing outstanding fines and using profanity. Most of those arrested are Black people. In 2023, Black people were 17.6 times more likely to be arrested by LPD than white people were.

    When making low-level arrests, LPD uses tactics normally reserved for serious offenses. For example, LPD officers broke down a Black man’s door to arrest him for swearing at a public official. In another case, while attempting to arrest a man for having a tinted windshield, officers followed the man’s car to his house, forced their way into his home, and tased him for 15 seconds. On the same day the Justice Department opened the investigation, LPD officers chased a man accused only of disturbing a business and tased him nine times.

    LPD’s enforcement strategy has put hundreds of people in debt to the police department. In a town of about 1,200 people, the total sum of outstanding fines owed to LPD is more than $1.7 million.

    The department also found that LPD lacks any meaningful accountability system and that people experiencing poverty who are accused of crimes in Lexington regularly lack access to counsel, both of which allow LPD’s misconduct to continue unchecked.

    The Justice Department opened its investigation on Nov. 8, 2023. Career attorneys and staff in the Civil Rights Division’s Special Litigation Section and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Mississippi conducted the investigation. The team was assisted in this investigation by experts in law enforcement practices. The team conducted an extensive review of LPD’s records, including hundreds of arrest reports and municipal court records and hundreds of hours of body-worn camera footage. The team also interviewed City and LPD leadership and line officers, accompanied officers on ride-alongs, observed the Lexington Municipal Court, and met with dozens of community members.

    In February, while the investigation was ongoing, the department issued a letter to the City of Lexington raising significant concerns regarding their practice of jailing people for unpaid fines without first assessing whether they can afford to pay them.

    The City and LPD cooperated fully with the investigation. The City and LPD have committed to working cooperatively with the department to address the violations identified in the department’s findings.

    The department conducted this investigation pursuant to 34 U.S.C. § 12601 (Section 12601), which prohibits law enforcement officers from engaging in a pattern or practice of conduct that deprives people of rights protected by the Constitution or federal law. Section 12601 authorizes the Attorney General to file a lawsuit in federal court seeking court-ordered remedies to eliminate a pattern or practice of unlawful conduct.

    This investigation reflects the Justice Department’s efforts to ensure constitutional policing and to combat unlawful practices with respect to fines and fees. The department previously addressed policing for profit in its findings on the Ferguson Police Department in Missouri in 2015. The consent decree that followed has resulted in the dismissal of about 63,000 citations and a reduction of over $1 million in fines and fees. In July 2022, the department filed a Statement of Interest in Coleman v. Brookside, explaining that judges, prosecutors, and police violate the Constitution when they are motivated by profit rather than justice. And in April 2023, the department issued a Dear Colleague Letter containing updated guidance on fines and fees for state and local courts.

    The department will be conducting outreach to members of the Lexington community for input on remedies to address the department’s findings. Individuals may submit recommendations to Community.LexingtonMS@usdoj.gov.

    The Justice Department will hold a public community meeting on Sept. 26 at 6:00 p.m. CT at St. Paul C.O.G.I.C. Fellowship Hall, 17214 Highway 17 South, Lexington, MS 39095. Members of the public are encouraged to attend.

    Additional information about the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division is available on its website at http://www.justice.gov/crt. Additional information about the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Mississippi is available at http://www.justice.gov/usao-sdms. Information specific to the Civil Rights Division’s Police Reform Work can be found at http://www.justice.gov/crt/file/922421/download.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Translation: The New Era of Competition Law Enforcement in Canada

    MIL OSI Translation. Canadian French to English –

    Source: Government of Canada – in French 1

    Notes for an address by Matthew Boswell, Commissioner of Competition at the Canadian Bar Association Fall Competition Conference – “The New Era of Competition Enforcement in Canada” – September 2024

    Notes for an address by Matthew Boswell, Commissioner of Competition

    Canadian Bar Association Fall Competition Conference

    September 2024

    (The speech delivered is authoritative)

    Good morning.

    I am pleased to be with you again this year for the Fall Conference on Competition Law.

    I would like to begin by reiterating that we are gathered today on the traditional, unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinaabe people.

    We gather as the spectacular colours of fall take hold here. One of the centrepieces of this seasonal transformation – here as in much of Canada – is undoubtedly the maple tree.

    The growth of the maple tree provides us with a good analogy for the changes: including the dramatic changes in competition law in Canada that I will tell you about today.

    At first, maple trees grow upwards… very quickly. Then they spread outwards to create their large canopy.

    The evolution of competition law in Canada has followed a similar path.

    That’s why I’m here today to talk about the recent round of amendments to the Competition Act. What these changes mean for the legal community and many of your clients. And what they mean for all Canadians. I’ll also talk about what’s not changing with these recent reforms. So let’s get started.

    The new era

    Ahead of recent amendments to the Competition Act in 2021, the government made significant investments in the Bureau’s budget to strengthen our ability to enforce the law and promote greater competition.

    These budget increases have enabled us to equip ourselves to meet the needs of Canada’s modern economy. In particular, we created our Digital Enforcement and Intelligence Branch, which leverages data and technology to support our enforcement and competition advocacy work.

    However, despite these new resources, we did not have the legislative tools necessary to take the enforcement action that the general public, and parliamentarians, expect.

    As you know, since 2022, Canadian competition law has undergone three waves of amendments. Let me summarize the highlights:

    The amendments began in 2022 with the criminalization of wage-fixing and no-poaching agreements, and increased maximum fines and penalties. Then, in 2023, the outdated efficiency defense was eliminated, the abuse of dominance rules were strengthened, and the Bureau was given formal market study powers. Finally, earlier this year, amendments equipped the Bureau to more effectively review mergers, including through the introduction of structural presumptions, and strengthened the provisions on deceptive marketing practices, particularly with respect to false claims of discounts, partial pricing, and unsubstantiated environmental claims.

    That’s a lot of changes in two years.

    Not surprisingly, Canada’s legal community has taken note and is actively working to assess the impact of these far-reaching changes. The result is a growing consensus: we have entered a “new era” of competition law, compliance and enforcement.

    In your newsletters, many of you have used words to describe these changes: “landmark,” “transformative,” “radical change,” and even “profound reform.”

    The Globe and Mail, in a July 2024 editorial, called it “a new era of competition law for consumers.”

    The broad consensus on the need for reform is not new. The feeling that Canada needs to do more to promote competition has been on everyone’s minds for some time.

    Three years ago, I joined you – more than two years into my mandate and still virtually due to the COVID-19 pandemic – to call for a comprehensive review of the Competition Act. At the time, it was almost a wild hope.

    And yet, we have come so far since then!

    This move was driven by a groundswell of Canadians calling for change in response to an economy where competition simply wasn’t working. People were clear: they want more competition.

    The desire for meaningful reform grew stronger in the House of Commons and the Senate, where unanimous all-party support provided the momentum needed to make these changes a reality.

    The details of these recent changes may not be universally agreed upon, as is rarely the case with laws. But there is unanimity that these efforts to modernize our laws are a legitimate and unavoidable response to the need to “do more.”

    This new era of competition law enforcement should be seen as a generational shift, rather than a radical one.

    Just as no one blames the maple tree for growing and thriving by adapting to its environment, our laws must respond to the needs and challenges of our economy as it exists today. With these changes, the government and Parliament are seeking to equip the Office with the right tools to achieve the results we all want: a vibrant and competitive Canadian economy.

    To return to the maple analogy, I see this new era a bit like the firmly spread branches of that robust tree. The brilliant canopy grew from an idea: increased competition will stimulate growth and benefit the public interest. It is a goal we all want to achieve.

    These changes are also consistent with the type of vastgovernment-wide competition program[in English only] that I am calling for to help solve Canada’s productivity problems.

    We can achieve this by doing the right thing: opening markets, setting their rules, enforcing them, and giving everyone a fair chance at growth, opportunity and investment.

    What to expect for the future

    Many of you will want to know how this modernized Competition Act will affect your clients. The changes are significant and far-reaching, and I understand that it is important for you to hear what the Bureau has to say about this new reality and how we will enforce the law going forward.

    From my perspective, there are four major changes that will define the way the Office works, thinks and reacts.

    First, more law enforcement action is to be expected.

    I think it will come from both the Bureau and the expanded private access regime.

    These legislative changes have given the Bureau the tools it needs to take meaningful enforcement action. This means that anti-competitive conduct will no longer fall through the cracks, as it did in the past, due to gaps in the legislation. It also means that there will be greater demand on the Competition Tribunal and other courts.

    And, to the delight of many in the room, I am sure, this will result in more case law.

    Second, we should expect faster and much less technocratic implementation.

    The Competition Act now includes simplified legal tests, a reverse onus and rebuttable presumptions for mergers. And as I mentioned a moment ago, the efficiency defence has been repealed.

    These changes will allow the Bureau to sort through cases and conduct investigations more quickly. They should also help to achieve results based on reasons that are understandable to ordinary people.

    To illustrate how these changes will simplify our work, we no longer have the burden of hundreds of paragraphs of complex mathematical formulas to determine whether a merger would violate the Competition Act.

    It was high time to bring some common sense back into our competition legislation.

    The third thing you can expect is a strengthening of corrective measures.

    We see this in the new merger remedial standard, the broader range of remedies available under section 90.1, and our new civil mechanism to enforce consent agreements. We also see it in the changes to maximum fines and penalties across the Act. We are now better able to seek real and meaningful sanctions when violations occur. This means that the days of absurdly low financial penalties are over.

    Private claimants will now be able to seek redress by applying to the Competition Tribunal.

    All of these changes translate into a law enforcement approach that is strict and diligent: those who break the law will face significant consequences for their actions.

    The fourth and final thing we can expect from this new era is a more people-centered approach to law enforcement.

    Implicitly, these changes ensure that the Act better reflects the current needs of the Canadian public in competition law matters, for example:

    What serves the public interest? Opening the door to public interest litigation will help answer this question. Recognizing the importance of competition to workers through the new wage-fixing and non-poaching offences, and by expressly incorporating the term “personnel” into the merger provisions. Ensuring that Canadian consumers are better protected from deceptive marketing practices, including by preventing the dissemination of partial pricing and false representations that mislead consumers and harm competitors. Strengthened protections for whistleblowers, complainants and others who come forward and provide assistance under the Act, under the new anti-retaliation provision.

    Overall, the amendments to the Competition Act result in a stronger legal framework for enforcement in Canada, and a system that is more responsive to public needs. A system that is much less tolerant of anti-competitive behaviour that misleads Canadian consumers, artificially drives up prices and keeps wages low, and limits productivity and innovation.

    Just as I talked about how this new era will affect the way the Office works, let’s now talk about how this new era will affect the choices businesses make.

    There are four areas I want to highlight today that I think will be of particular interest to you.

    Mergers

    Let’s start with effective merger control. Strong rules are vital because they are the Bureau’s first line of defense in its efforts to protect the competitiveness of our economy.

    For the vast majority of mergers, things will not change in this new era. But in some cases, there are significant changes that deserve attention.

    First, more mergers are now subject to prior merger notice requirements. And, regardless of prior notice, in all cases where we seek an injunction, a merger cannot close until the injunction is heard and determined. These changes clearly reaffirm the preventive purpose of merger review.

    Second, transactions that were not notified will be subject to a longer limitation period during which we can, if necessary, file a claim after the transaction has closed. In practical terms, this means that there is now less risk that anti-competitive transactions will escape our notice.

    Third, we can expect a greater dose of healthy skepticism about merger proposals in concentrated sectors. This is the result of the repeal of the efficiency defence and the creation of rebuttable structural presumptions. This puts an end to what was – in my view – an overly permissive approach to mergers or, as one of my predecessors described it, “the weakest merger legislation of any of our peer countries.”

    Fourth, among other notable changes regarding mergers, the standard for remedies is now much stricter. This will move us toward remedies that, in both intent and effect, fully preserve and protect competition from anticompetitive mergers. This is a significant improvement over the situation that prevailed just a year ago.

    It bears repeating: the vast majority of mergers reviewed under the Competition Act are not complex and are cleared quickly. That will not change.

    But for complex cases, especially those that raise significant competition issues, expect us to come knocking. In those cases, some parties will simply need to be well-prepared to explain their merger plans. But for ill-advised transactions that are particularly anticompetitive, in this new era, those ideas should never leave the boardroom.

    I recognize that having good guidance in this area is essential. That is why we will soon be launching a comprehensive review of the merger enforcement guidelines. We will also take this opportunity to ensure that we have modern guidelines that reflect the digital economy and the most recent case law.

    As part of this process, we will be publishing a discussion paper in the coming weeks that will include questions for your consideration. We hope that you will participate in this process to help us make these guidelines as useful and rigorous as possible.

    A draft of the revised guidelines will follow. We value your input and that of your clients. Your contributions to our guidance contribute to greater clarity for everyone.

    Monopolistic practices

    Let’s move on to the second point on the list of notable changes: monopolistic practices.

    It is not bad to be big. Companies that grow by innovating and competing on the merits should not be punished – this is an essential foundation of the competitive process.

    The recent changes do not change our view on this. What does change is our ability to clearly define offenders and the very real possibility of applying meaningful sanctions in the event of a violation. These changes finally bring us in line with our peers.

    In this new era, we now have a simplified test for determining whether there has been an abuse of dominance requiring a prohibition order. This will help us stop any conduct by dominant firms that has harmed competition in the market or was intended to do so.

    We can also count on a significant improvement in the provision on civil agreements. This will allow us to tackle a broader range of anti-competitive agreements. It is accompanied by more effective remedies to address harm and promote compliance.

    In this area, we have published newguidelines for property controlsfor public consultation. We consider our position to be strong but responsible. However, we remain open to other points of view. We invite you to provide us with your comments before finalizing these guidelines.

    Finally, on this point, we are preparing additional guidance on restrictive trade practices and we will also consult on this draft guidance.

    Deceptive business practices

    Next, let’s look at how this new era will affect our enforcement work in the area of deceptive marketing practices.

    This is an area where the Bureau needed an enforcement framework that was relevant to our times. We needed the tools to do the best job possible in combating these long-standing practices that harm consumers and competition.

    First, partial pricing. As you know, we have had many successes in pursuing those who engage in this anti-competitive practice.

    Just earlier this week, the Competition Tribunal released its decision in the Cineplex partial pricing case. This is a resounding victory for Canadians, and a concrete example of our new era of competition enforcement.

    I know that Cineplex has announced its intention to appeal. However, I want to point out that this is the first decision made by the Tribunal under the recent amendments to the Competition Act, which include the possibility of imposing higher administrative monetary penalties.

    This decision sends a strong message: companies must not practice partial pricing and must display their full prices up front whenever additional charges are mandatory for consumers. Companies that do not comply with the law are exposed to significant financial penalties.

    Of course, we have also recently obtained two consent agreements in this area, against TicketNetwork and SiriusXM Canada. We also have several other investigations underway. The lesson is clear: expect a response and consequences if you engage in false or misleading practices by advertising prices that are unattainable due to fees that are not disclosed in the offer.

    We will now turn to an area that has been the subject of much discussion: the provisions relating to environmental reporting and greenwashing. I can assure you that at the Bureau, we have heard loud and clear that there is a strong desire for guidance on these new provisions in the Act. We have already acted and we will continue to act expeditiously on this issue.

    While these changes are significant, it is important to remember that our laws already prohibited greenwashing and unsubstantiated performance claims.

    The Competition Act has long contained provisions prohibiting false or misleading representations to promote a product or business interest. Take, for example, the action we brought against Keurig Canada in 2022. Our investigation found that the company’s claims about the recyclability of its single-serve coffee pods were false or misleading. Keurig agreed to pay a $3 million penalty.

    Similarly, performance claims that are not based on adequate or appropriate testing have been prohibited in Canada since the 1930s. By extension, the Bureau has long advised companies that these provisions apply to environmental claims. Not only have we issued guidance and warnings for many years, but we have also taken enforcement action in high-profile cases.

    Based on our past actions, you can see that these new provisions represent an evolution – not a revolution – in the fight against misleading marketing practices. This means that advertisers are expected to base their environmental claims on solid foundations, so that they are not considered false or misleading to consumers.

    As you know, we are leadingconsultationson these new provisions and we will carefully examine the reactions received. In the meantime, I invite interested parties to read the special edition ofVolume 7 of the Collection of Deceptive Commercial Practices. It contains useful advice on how to comply with the pre-existing provisions of the Act in relation to environmental reporting.

    Private access

    Finally, I will share with you some thoughts on the changes to the private access regime in this new era.

    The amendments have created a much more robust private enforcement system. It now extends to most of our civil provisions. It is available to a wider range of claimants. It is accompanied by a relaxation of the test used to determine whether a case can proceed and allows the court to order the payment of money.

    We welcome and support these changes, as they will support the work of the Office, lead to more case law and provide access to private remedies.

    The impact of these changes is already visible. Private access is being used as a tool in abuse of dominance cases, including Apotex and JAMP Pharma. And this is just the beginning. More significant changes to the Act will come into force in June 2025.

    We will be monitoring cases closely and scrutinizing them for opportunities to intervene and provide the Bureau’s perspective, particularly if important legal issues are at stake. And I am sure many of you in this room will do the same.

    We plan to update our Private Access Procedures Information Bulletin in light of these important changes, including the factors we will consider in deciding whether to intervene.

    I also want to make it clear that we recognise the importance of having a well-resourced Competition Tribunal. As we move into a new era where we intend to bring more cases before the Tribunal, and we anticipate an increasing number of private access cases, this will only become more important to ensure that we adjudicate quickly and efficiently.

    What comes next

    I have spent a good deal of my time today explaining to you what I believe the changes to the Competition Act will do to the enforcement of the Act. And, therefore, what they will do to your work.

    Yes, there is broad public support for modernizing the Competition Act, and these changes bring Canada in line with international best practices. And yes, some of the changes are still a bit rough; they will need to be sanded down to a smoother finish, whether through guidance or case law. That is to be expected. After all, this is a framework law, not a code.

    However, despite these significant changes, it is also important to note what is not changing. This is still a framework law focused on maintaining and promoting competition in Canada, not a sector-specific regulation or price control regime.

    The Competition Act remains subject to strong due process protections, evidentiary requirements and clearance standards to ensure fairness for all parties and to weed out clearly unmeritorious cases. The Bureau will, of course, continue to enforce the law in a transparent, predictable and rigorous manner. In other words, while the maple tree’s canopy has expanded, its roots have remained the same.

    When it comes to ensuring fair and equitable competition in Canada, we have been working to do so for almost as long as Canada has existed. It is not talked about enough. The new laws are a response to an old problem.

    In 1889, Canada became the first country in the world to adopt modern antitrust legislation. Our legislation, like that of the United States, was a response to the serious problems faced by people in these young, emerging markets. This tradition, which dates back more than 135 years, continued into the 20th century. In the 1920s, Prime Minister Mackenzie King himself introduced the Combines Investigation Act, which became the basis for today’s Competition Act, for first reading.

    Then, in the 1980s, the Competition Act was amended through Bill C-91 – legislative changes that, according to a statement by the then minister responsible for that portfolio, were necessary to adapt the Act to the demands of a modern marketplace.

    This brings us to today’s changes, the final step in a long journey.

    As I explained at the beginning of my speech, a generational change in competition law is here. Finally.

    Which brings us back to the maple analogy:

    These are new branches that complete the canopy of Canada’s competition tree. They cover a larger area with the rules and enforcement framework needed to keep pace with today’s economy. But this canopy is consistent with previous principles. These changes build on the Bureau’s long history of commitment to transparent, evidence-based enforcement.

    Conclusion

    In closing, I would like to reiterate that we are entering a new era of competition law enforcement in Canada. Today, we have much stronger legislation that finally addresses many of the long-standing deficiencies in the Competition Act.

    As I indicated, we are developing guidance to clarify the effects of these changes for the Office and for your clients. We want you to help us refine it.

    However, the message from Canadians and parliamentarians has been clear: they want stronger and more active enforcement. These recent amendments have given us the tools to achieve this.

    I would like to leave you with a clear conclusion: in this new era, you must expect a more aggressive and active authority, which will use all the tools at its disposal in the interests of Canada, its people and its economy.

    These changes are long overdue, and it is now up to me, as Commissioner of Competition, to ensure that they are implemented in a way that meets the high expectations of the Canadian public and parliamentarians.

    So, fasten your seat belt.

    THANKS.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI Translation: The Government of Canada and its partners are laying the groundwork for standardizing mental health and substance use care

    MIL OSI Translation. Canadian French to English –

    Source: Government of Canada – in French

    Government of Canada and partners lay the groundwork for standardizing mental health and substance use care New set of guidelines and resources released to support equitable access to quality care for all

    New set of guidelines and resources released to promote equitable access to quality care for all

    September 26, 2024 | Ottawa, Ontario | Health Canada

    Everyone living in Canada deserves a health care system that provides the services they need, when and where they need them. The types and ease of access to mental health and substance use supports can vary across Canada, leading to inconsistencies in quality and accessibility.

    In response to this challenge, Health Canada has tasked the Standards Council of Canada with coordinating the development of a set of guidelines and resources to strengthen understanding, consistency and integration among mental health and substance use health providers across the country.

    These resources include the following:

    Integrated Youth Services (IYS) Guidance Document Report on Integrating Mental Health and Substance Use Health Services in Primary Care Settings Report on Gaps and Recommendations for SMSLCS Digital Applications Report on Integrated Mental Health and Substance Use Health Services for People with Complex Needs – with a Focus on Early Intervention for Psychosis Publicly Available Guidance Document to Systematize Substance Use Competencies for All Prescribers Report on Gaps and Opportunities for Enhancement in Withdrawal Management Services to Support Substance Use Health Care

    This work can improve care for people across Canada by promoting evidence-based approaches to key mental health and substance use issues. It recognizes that health care delivery is primarily the responsibility of the provinces and territories and provides mental health and substance use care providers with a collection of principles, guidelines and best practices that they can reference, learn from and put into practice.

    Additionally, this work will help inform future federal actions to support positive mental health and substance use care, reduce barriers to care, and address capacity constraints in the front-line workforce.

    Hundreds of Canadians invested their energy and expertise in this initiative, including individuals with past and present experience, Indigenous peoples, clinical specialists, service providers, community organizations, family and peer advocates, academics and many others. Health Canada would like to thank all those who participated in this important work, and especially the committee co-chairs, Ms. Carol Hopkins and Mr. Brian Rush, for their leadership and wisdom in guiding this process.

    Yuval DanielDirector of CommunicationsOffice of the Honourable Ya’ara SaksMinister of Mental Health and Addictions and Associate Minister of Health819-360-6927

    Media RelationsHealth Canada and the Public Health Agency of Canada613-957-2983media@hc-sc.gc.ca

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: Acadia Healthcare Company Inc. to Pay $19.85M to Settle Allegations Relating to Medically Unnecessary Inpatient Behavioral Health Services

    Source: US State of North Dakota

    Acadia Healthcare Company Inc., a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Franklin, Tennessee, has agreed to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act and related state statutes by knowingly billing for medically unnecessary inpatient behavioral health services or for services that did not meet federal and state regulations. Acadia Healthcare Company owns and operates inpatient behavioral health facilities throughout the United States, including The Pavilion at HealthPark LLC, doing business as Park Royal Hospital in Ft. Myers, Florida; Riverwoods Behavioral Health LLC, doing business as Lakeview Behavioral Health in Norcross, Georgia, and as Riverwoods Behavioral Health System in Riverdale, Georgia; Ten Broeck Tampa LLC, doing business as North Tampa Behavioral Health in Wesley Chapel, Florida; PHC of Michigan LLC, doing business as Harbor Oaks Hospital in New Baltimore, Michigan; and Seven Hills Hospital LLC, doing business as Seven Hills Hospital in Henderson, Nevada (collectively, Acadia).

    The United States contended that, between 2014 and 2017, Acadia knowingly submitted false claims for payment to Medicare, Medicaid and TRICARE for inpatient behavioral health services that were not reasonable or medically necessary. In particular, the United States contended that Acadia admitted beneficiaries who were not eligible for inpatient treatment and failed to properly discharge beneficiaries when they no longer needed inpatient treatment and had improper and excessive lengths of stay. The United States further alleged that Acadia knowingly failed to provide adequate staffing, training and/or supervision of staff, which resulted in assaults, elopements, suicides and other harm resulting from these staffing failures. In addition, Acadia allegedly failed to provide inpatient acute care in accord with federal and state regulations, including, but not limited to, by failing to provide active treatment, to develop and/or update individualized assessments and treatment plans, to provide adequate discharge planning and to provide required individual and group therapy.

    Under the settlement agreement, Acadia will pay $16,663,918 to the United States to resolve its liability under the False Claims Act for its allegedly false Medicare, Medicaid and TRICARE billings. The Medicaid program is jointly funded by the states and the federal government, and pursuant to separate settlement agreements, Acadia will pay an additional $3,186,082 to Florida, Georgia, Michigan and Nevada to resolve their state law claims against Acadia.  

    “This settlement demonstrates the Justice Department’s commitment to ensuring that federal healthcare programs pay only for services that are needed and properly provided,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Brian M. Boynton, head of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “It is particularly important that health care providers satisfy these requirements when providing services to a vulnerable patient population, such as residents of an inpatient behavioral health facility.”

    “Federal health care programs rely upon the honesty and credibility of participating providers,” said U.S. Attorney Roger B. Handberg for the Middle District of Florida. “The Justice Department will hold accountable those who seek to exploit these programs for personal gain, jeopardizing the health of patients.”

    “Medical providers who participate in federally funded health care programs must follow the law when billing Medicare, Medicaid and Tricare,” said Special Agent in Charge Tamala E. Miles of the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG). “This settlement illustrates HHS-OIG’s commitment to protecting the integrity of these taxpayer-funded programs and the well-being of enrollees seeking treatment. Working closely with the United States Attorney’s Office and other law enforcement partners, we will continue to thoroughly investigate such fraudulent billing schemes.”

    “Billing TRICARE for medically unnecessary inpatient behavioral health services or for services that did not meet federal and state regulations impacts our ability to reimburse providers in a timely manner for care that is needed to keep our military ready to defend the nation,” said Rear Admiral Matthew Case of the U.S. Navy and Acting Assistant Director for Health Care Administration for the Defense Health Agency. “We thank our state and federal partners for their work on this case, and the whistleblowers who came forward for their bravery. As a result, we are able to continue delivering one of the most comprehensive and affordable health benefits available to any American.”

    The settlement includes the resolution of claims brought under the qui tam or whistleblower provisions of the False Claims Act by Franka Tirado, Brian Snyder and Jamie Thompson, all former employees of Acadia. Under those provisions, a private party can file an action on behalf of the United States and receive a portion of any recovery. The qui tam cases are captioned U.S. ex rel. Tirado, et al. v. Park Royal Hospital et al., Case No. 2:17-cv-201-FtM-99 (MDFL), and U.S. ex rel. Thompson v. Acadia Healthcare Company Inc., et al., Case No. 2:18-cv-543-FtM-38CM (MDFL). The whistleblower share of the federal portion of the settlement will be $3,166,144.42.

    The resolution obtained in this matter was the result of a coordinated effort between the Civil Division’s Commercial Litigation Branch, Fraud Section, and U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida, as well as the National Association of Medicaid Fraud Control Units, with assistance from HHS-OIG and the Department of Defense Criminal Investigative Service.

    The investigation and resolution of this matter illustrates the government’s emphasis on combating health care fraud. One of the most powerful tools in this effort is the False Claims Act. Tips and complaints from all sources about potential fraud, waste, abuse and mismanagement can be reported to HHS at 800-HHS-TIPS (800-447-8477).

    Senior Trial Counsel Sarah Arni of the Civil Division’s Fraud Section and former Senior Litigation Counsel Lindsay Griffin for the Middle District of Florida handled the matter.

    The claims resolved by the settlements are allegations only. There has been no determination of liability.

    Settlement

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Two Russian Nationals Charged in Connection with Operating Billion Dollar Money Laundering Services

    Source: US State of North Dakota

    The Justice Department today announced actions coordinated with the Department of State, Department of the Treasury, and other federal and international law enforcement partners to combat Russian money laundering operations. The actions involved the unsealing of an indictment charging a Russian national with his involvement in operating multiple money laundering services that catered to cybercriminals, as well as the seizure of websites associated with three illicit cryptocurrency exchanges.

    “Today’s actions highlight the Department’s continued disruption of malicious cyber actors and their criminal ecosystem,” said Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco. “The two Russian nationals charged today allegedly pocketed millions of dollars from prolific money laundering and fueled a network of cyber criminals around the world, with Ivanov allegedly facilitating darknet drug traffickers and ransomware operators. Working with our Dutch partners, we shut down Cryptex, an illicit crypto exchange and recovered millions of dollars in cryptocurrency.”

    “Every step cybercriminals take in their pursuit of money leaves another track that leads us to their doorstep,” said U.S. Attorney Jessica D. Aber for the Eastern District of Virginia. “And if you follow them on their path of greed, they will lead us to you. We will not stop, because while domains can always be seized, justice is unyielding.”

    “The Secret Service is relentless in pursuing those engaged in criminal activity,” said Assistant Director Brian Lambert of the U.S. Secret Service. “I thank our domestic and foreign partners for their efforts on this case, as we continue our work bringing to justice those engaged in transnational criminal activity.”

    According to court documents unsealed today in the Eastern District of Virginia, Russian national Sergey Ivanov, known online as “Taleon,” among other aliases, was charged with one count of conspiracy to commit and aid and abet bank fraud for providing payment processing support to the carding website Rescator, and one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering for laundering proceeds from the carding website Joker’s Stash. “Carding” is the unlawful acquisition of and trade in stolen credit and debit card information for fraudulent purposes. Ivanov allegedly operated for nearly two decades as a professional cyber money launderer, advertising his services to other cybercriminals on exclusive Russian-speaking criminal forums. Over the years, Ivanov’s laundering services and payment systems have catered to cybercrime marketplaces, ransomware groups, and hackers responsible for significant data breaches of major U.S. companies.

    Ivanov allegedly created and/or operated Russian payment and exchange services UAPS, PinPays, and PM2BTC, which provided money transfer and laundering services directly to criminals. Cryptocurrency blockchain analysis revealed that between July 12, 2013, and Aug. 10, cryptocurrency addresses associated with Ivanov’s alleged money laundering services conducted transactions totaling approximately $1.15 billion in value. Approximately 32% of all traced bitcoin sent to these addresses originated from other cryptocurrency addresses associated with criminal activity. For example, more than $158 million of bitcoin flowing into Ivanov’s addresses allegedly represented fraud proceeds, more than $8.8 million allegedly represented proceeds from known ransomware payments, and approximately $4.7 million allegedly originated from darknet drug markets. The U.S. Secret Service has obtained court authorization to seize domains associated with the UAPS and PM2BTC websites.

    The Rescator carding website allegedly sold stolen payment card data from U.S. financial institutions and personally identifiable information (PII) of U.S. citizens. For example, the website allegedly advertised the sale of data from up to 40 million payment cards and the PII of approximately 70 million people that had been stolen from a major U.S. retail victim in 2013. The breach cost the U.S. retail victim at least $202 million in expenses and caused damage to the U.S. retail victim’s customers, who became targets of identity theft by other cybercriminals. Ivanov allegedly provided payment processing support for the Rescator carding site through the UAPS and PinPays services for purchases made on the site using bitcoin.

    Additionally, Russian national Timur Shakhmametov, known online as “JokerStash” and “Vega,” among other aliases, is charged in the same indictment with one count of conspiracy to commit and aid and abet bank fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit access device fraud, and one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering related to his work in operating the carding website Joker’s Stash and laundering the proceeds. Joker’s Stash offered for sale data from approximately 40 million payment cards annually, totaling hundreds of millions of payment cards overall, and was one of the largest known carding markets in history. Estimates of its profits range from $280 million to more than $1 billion. Shakhmametov and others allegedly promoted Joker’s Stash and its products by advertising the Joker’s Stash website and its stolen payment card data on numerous online cybercrime forums.

    Separately, the U.S. Secret Service executed a seizure order from the District of Maryland against two website domain names used to support the cryptocurrency money laundering exchange “Cryptex.net.” According to court records unsealed today, Cryptex.net and Cryptex.one were associated with the administration and operation of Cryptex, which offers complete anonymity to Cryptex users by allowing them to register for accounts without providing know-your-customer compliance requirements. Like UAPS and PM2BTC, Cryptex advertised itself directly to cybercriminals.

    According to a company that provides blockchain analytics services to law enforcement, there have been more than 37,500 transactions involving bitcoin addresses associated with Cryptex, amounting to a total value of approximately 62,586 bitcoin, or $1.4 billion at the time the transactions were made. Of that amount, about 31% of the bitcoin sent, or $441 million, originated from cryptocurrency addresses associated with criminal conduct, including $297 million of fraud proceeds and more than $115 million of proceeds from ransomware payments. Nine percent of all bitcoin sent to Cryptex, or $162 million, originated from cryptocurrency addresses associated with services often used by cybercriminals. Further, 28% of all bitcoin sent from Cryptex was sent to companies or darknet markets sanctioned by the United States.

    The seizure of these domains by the government will prevent the owners and third parties from using the sites for money laundering. Individuals visiting those sites now will see a message indicating that the site has been seized by the federal government.

    As part of the coordinated actions taken today, our Dutch partners seized the servers hosting PM2BTC and Cryptex. Those servers have been taken offline at various locations around the world, and the Dutch have seized cryptocurrency from those servers worth over $7 million.

    In coordination with the department’s actions, other U.S. government agencies and foreign law enforcement partners are also taking related actions. The U.S. Department of State issued reward offers up to $11 million through its Transnational Organized Crime Rewards Program for information leading to the arrest and/or conviction of Ivanov and others involved in the operation of his money laundering services, and for Shakhmametov and others involved in the operation of Joker’s Stash. Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued an order that identifies PM2BTC as being of “primary money laundering concern” in connection with Russian illicit finance. Concurrently, Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctioned Cryptex and Ivanov.

    The U.S. Secret Service Cyber Investigative Section is investigating the case.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Zoe Bedell for the Eastern District of Virginia is prosecuting the case against Ivanov and Shakhmametov. Trial Attorney Jeff Pearlman and Senior Counsel Jessica Peck of the Criminal Division’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Sullivan of the District of Maryland are handling the investigation into Cryptex. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs also provided assistance in these matters.

    The Netherlands Police, Dutch Fiscal Information and Investigation Service, the International Cooperation Department of the Central Criminal Police of the State Police of Latvia, Europol, the National Cyber-Forensics & Training Alliance, the German Federal Criminal Police Office, and the UK National Crime Agency provided invaluable assistance.

    The text of FinCEN’s order can be found here.

    For more information on the individuals and entities that OFAC designated today, click here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Justice Department Announces New Resources to Improve Firearm Background Checks and Reduce Gun Violence

    Source: US State of North Dakota

    The Justice Department today announced several actions to improve firearm background checks and reduce gun violence. The Department is releasing model legislation and information that would help states permit the sharing of juvenile criminal history and mental health records with the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), solely for the purpose of conducting firearm background checks. In addition, the Department is announcing significant new grant funding for gun violence prevention, totaling over $200 million. Finally, the Department is unveiling new resources for law enforcement across the country, including training and funding guidance.

    “The Department of Justice is committed to doing everything in its power to combat gun violence and save lives,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “Today’s actions are a continuation of our efforts to fully implement the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, to provide critical funding to community violence intervention programs, and to assist our state and local partners as they work day in and day out to drive down gun crime.”

    Under the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act of 2022 (BSCA), NICS is required to contact state and local law enforcement entities to determine if a purchaser under 21 years of age is prohibited from purchasing a firearm. However, as part of established juvenile justice and mental health systems, some states and territories have important laws in place which restrict the sharing of juvenile mental health and/or criminal history records, so that youthful mistakes do not follow young people into adulthood.

    At the same time, these protections may prevent jurisdictions from providing the FBI with potentially disqualifying juvenile records when an enhanced background check is conducted. The model legislation released today, following in the example of several states that have appropriately and narrowly amended their record-sharing laws, provides a template for states that wish to permit greater information-sharing with NICS for the sole purpose of responding to a federal enhanced background check, thereby advancing public safety. In addition, the Justice Department is also releasing today information on state laws around the country, including whether they permit information-sharing with regard to juvenile records for enhanced background checks.

    Additionally, the Justice Department is also announcing two major rounds of grant funding designed to reduce and prevent gun violence. First, the Department is announcing an additional $85 million in funding through the Office of Justice Programs Community Violence Intervention and Prevention Initiative (CVIPI). This funding will help 30 agencies and organizations develop and expand their community violence intervention work, including hospital-based violence intervention, street outreach, and cognitive behavioral therapy, and will support training and technical assistance plus rigorous research to help grow the evidence base for violence intervention models. Second, the Department is announcing over $135 million in formula awards to 48 states under the Byrne State Crisis Intervention Program (Byrne SCIP), which provides funding for the implementation of extreme risk protection order programs, state crisis intervention court proceedings, and related programs/initiatives.

    Moreover, the Justice Department is committed to supporting implementation of the recommendations from the Critical Incident Report (CIR) on the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas. These implementation efforts include a suite of resources to not only support the local community of Uvalde, but also to serve as a resource across the country, particularly for local, rural, and regional agencies serving their communities. Today, the Department’s Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) office is releasing a Tenets of Training Checklist to assist law enforcement executives and training personnel in enhancing relevant training and a Resource Webpage tailored to the needs of Small and Rural agencies. This fall, DOJ will release a Self-Assessment Tool to help communities assess how well they are implementing the recommendations in the CIR and an Implementation and Resource Guide to identify resources and generally accepted practices and standards in the CIR. Additional resources will be released on a continual basis to continue to support law enforcement agencies and their communities.

    The COPS Office Collaborative Reform Initiative Technical Assistance Center (CRI-TAC) is also launching a renewed focus on assisting small and rural law enforcement agencies. Small and rural agencies will continue to have access to the no-cost training and technical assistance that CRI-TAC is known for, but now CRI-TAC will provide training and technical assistance opportunities geared for the unique challenges confronting small and rural policing agencies. Through the Small and Rural Agency Initiative, agencies will be able to participate in training programs addressing areas such as active assailant response, multi-jurisdictional coordination, community partnerships, resource allocation, addressing hate crimes, report writing, duty to intervene, and crash re-construction.

    Model Legislation to Remove Barriers to Completing Enhanced Background Checks (PDF)

    States’ Legal Ability to Provide Juvenile Information

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Justice Department Finds Civil Rights Violations by the City of Lexington, Mississippi, and the Lexington Police Department

    Source: US State of North Dakota

    Note: View the findings report here.

    Following a comprehensive investigation, the Justice Department announced today that the City of Lexington, Mississippi (City), and Lexington Police Department (LPD) engage in a pattern or practice of conduct that deprives people of their rights under the U.S. Constitution and federal law. Lexington is a town of approximately 1,200 people, located about an hour outside of Jackson, Mississippi.

    Specifically, the Justice Department finds that LPD unlawfully

    • Arrests, jails and detains people who cannot pay fines or fees, without assessing their ability to pay;
    • Uses excessive force;
    • Conducts stops, searches and arrests without probable cause, including jailing people on illegal “investigative holds” and arresting people solely because they owe outstanding fines;
    • Imposes money bail without justification or assessment of ability to pay;
    • Jails people without prompt access to court;
    • Violates the rights of people engaged in free speech and expression, including by retaliating against people who criticize the police;
    • Discriminates against Black people; and
    • Operates under an unconstitutional conflict of interest because LPD’s funding depends on the money it raises through its enforcement.

    “Today’s findings show that the Lexington Police Department abandoned its sacred position of trust in the community by routinely violating the constitutional rights of those it was sworn to protect,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “The Justice Department’s investigation uncovered that Lexington police officers have engaged in a pattern or practice of discriminating against the city’s Black residents, used excessive force, and retaliated against those who criticize them. Additionally, Lexington’s approach to fines and fees — including unlawfully arresting, jailing, and detaining people based on their failure to pay money without assessing if they can afford to do so — has been devastating for its residents. Being poor is not a crime, but practices like these amount to punishing people for poverty. People in that community deserve better, and the Justice Department is committed to working with them, the City, and the Police Department to make the City safer for all its citizens.”

    “Public safety depends on public confidence in our justice system,” said Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco. “The Lexington Police Department’s incarceration of individuals because they could not afford to pay fines — as detailed in today’s findings report — undermined that confidence and violated the civil rights of Lexington residents. I’m grateful to the Civil Rights Division for its thorough investigation and continued work to address these findings.”

    “Lexington is a small, rural community but its police department has had a heavy hand in people’s lives, wreaking havoc through use of excessive force, racially discriminatory policing, retaliation, and more. In every corner of our country, police officers must respect people’s constitutional rights and treat people with dignity,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “After an extensive review, we found that police officers in Lexington routinely make illegal arrests, use brutal and unnecessary force, and punish people for their poverty — including by jailing people who cannot afford to pay fines or money bail. For too long, the Lexington Police Department has been playing by its own rules and operating with impunity — it’s time for this to end. Our findings report furthers the Justice Department’s commitment to ensuring fairness and the rule of law.”

    “Police have the authority to enforce the law, not to act as debt collectors for the City, extracting payments from the poor with threats of jail,” said U.S. Attorney Todd Gee for the Southern District of Mississippi. “No matter how large or small, every police department has an obligation to follow the Constitution.”

    Based on the department’s investigation, over the past two years, LPD has made nearly one arrest for every four people in town, primarily for low-level offenses and traffic violations. That is more than 10 times the per capita arrest rate for Mississippi as a whole. Many of these arrests were for non-criminal conduct, like owing outstanding fines and using profanity. Most of those arrested are Black people. In 2023, Black people were 17.6 times more likely to be arrested by LPD than white people were.

    When making low-level arrests, LPD uses tactics normally reserved for serious offenses. For example, LPD officers broke down a Black man’s door to arrest him for swearing at a public official. In another case, while attempting to arrest a man for having a tinted windshield, officers followed the man’s car to his house, forced their way into his home, and tased him for 15 seconds. On the same day the Justice Department opened the investigation, LPD officers chased a man accused only of disturbing a business and tased him nine times.

    LPD’s enforcement strategy has put hundreds of people in debt to the police department. In a town of about 1,200 people, the total sum of outstanding fines owed to LPD is more than $1.7 million.

    The department also found that LPD lacks any meaningful accountability system and that people experiencing poverty who are accused of crimes in Lexington regularly lack access to counsel, both of which allow LPD’s misconduct to continue unchecked.

    The Justice Department opened its investigation on Nov. 8, 2023. Career attorneys and staff in the Civil Rights Division’s Special Litigation Section and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Mississippi conducted the investigation. The team was assisted in this investigation by experts in law enforcement practices. The team conducted an extensive review of LPD’s records, including hundreds of arrest reports and municipal court records and hundreds of hours of body-worn camera footage. The team also interviewed City and LPD leadership and line officers, accompanied officers on ride-alongs, observed the Lexington Municipal Court, and met with dozens of community members.

    In February, while the investigation was ongoing, the department issued a letter to the City of Lexington raising significant concerns regarding their practice of jailing people for unpaid fines without first assessing whether they can afford to pay them.

    The City and LPD cooperated fully with the investigation. The City and LPD have committed to working cooperatively with the department to address the violations identified in the department’s findings.

    The department conducted this investigation pursuant to 34 U.S.C. § 12601 (Section 12601), which prohibits law enforcement officers from engaging in a pattern or practice of conduct that deprives people of rights protected by the Constitution or federal law. Section 12601 authorizes the Attorney General to file a lawsuit in federal court seeking court-ordered remedies to eliminate a pattern or practice of unlawful conduct.

    This investigation reflects the Justice Department’s efforts to ensure constitutional policing and to combat unlawful practices with respect to fines and fees. The department previously addressed policing for profit in its findings on the Ferguson Police Department in Missouri in 2015. The consent decree that followed has resulted in the dismissal of about 63,000 citations and a reduction of over $1 million in fines and fees. In July 2022, the department filed a Statement of Interest in Coleman v. Brookside, explaining that judges, prosecutors, and police violate the Constitution when they are motivated by profit rather than justice. And in April 2023, the department issued a Dear Colleague Letter containing updated guidance on fines and fees for state and local courts.

    The department will be conducting outreach to members of the Lexington community for input on remedies to address the department’s findings. Individuals may submit recommendations to Community.LexingtonMS@usdoj.gov.

    The Justice Department will hold a public community meeting on Sept. 26 at 6:00 p.m. CT at St. Paul C.O.G.I.C. Fellowship Hall, 17214 Highway 17 South, Lexington, MS 39095. Members of the public are encouraged to attend.

    Additional information about the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division is available on its website at http://www.justice.gov/crt. Additional information about the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Mississippi is available at http://www.justice.gov/usao-sdms. Information specific to the Civil Rights Division’s Police Reform Work can be found at http://www.justice.gov/crt/file/922421/download.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Deploying Water Rescue Team Ahead of Hurricane Helene

    Source: US State of New York

    Governor Kathy Hochul today announced the deployment of a team of 16 swift water rescue personnel, two canines and emergency response equipment to assist communities impacted by Hurricane Helene. The team, made up of members from the Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services Office of Fire Prevention and Control, the Department of Environmental Conservation and State Police, are en route to Conover, North Carolina where they will deploy as directed.

    New Yorkers lead by example and help our neighbors in times of despair,” Governor Hochul said. “Our expert swift water rescue team and the equipment they will bring with them will help save lives and protect against the potential destruction of property from Hurricane Helene. I thank these brave New Yorkers for answering the call and look forward to their safe return.”

    This team can conduct search and water rescues for people and animals, provide emergency medical care and support helicopter rescue operations. They are trained to operate in areas with compromised access to roadways, utilities, transportation and medical facilities, and with limited availability of shelter, food and water. Equipment sent to North Carolina with the team includes Zodiac boats and motors with trailers, two high-water rescue vehicles and drones.

    Personnel were deployed as part of the Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC), the nation’s all-hazards national mutual aid system. EMAC has been ratified by U.S. Congress (PL 104-321) and is law in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands and the Northern Mariana Islands. EMAC’s Members can share resources from all disciplines, protect personnel who deploy and be reimbursed for mission-related costs.

    Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services Commissioner Jackie Bray said, “New Yorkers know all too well the impacts that severe weather can have on a community. We are always willing to lend a hand to help other states in need, and we thank those who are currently on their way to provide support to those who will be impacted by Hurricane Helene.”

    Department of Environmental Conservation Interim Commissioner Sean Mahar said, “DEC Forest Rangers are some of the most highly trained search and rescue professionals in the country and we are fortunate that they are always willing to answer the call when other states are in need. As preparations for Hurricane Helene’s landfall continue, I thank our experts for accepting the challenge and joining a team of heroes from across New York State.”

    New York State Police Superintendent Steven G. James said, “The New York State Police have always answered the call for assistance wherever it’s needed. We are proud to work hand-in-hand with the Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services Office of Fire Prevention and Department of Environmental Conservation to mitigate this emergency situation. Our members will be assisting our partners with public safety and recovery efforts as long as necessary.”

    The swift water team is just the latest instance of New York State sending assistance to other states to help with emergencies. Since the beginning of this summer, Governor Hochul deployed a total of 45 New Yorkers, including 26 DEC Forest Rangers, to battle wildfires in Montana and Oregon. New York’s expertly trained wildland firefighters serve as task force leaders, facilities unit leaders, engine crews, and on suppression teams. One Forest Ranger remains deployed to the Homestead Complex fire on the Umpqua National Forest in Oregon and is scheduled to return home on Oct. 9.

    Hurricane Helene, currently a Category 3 storm, is expected to strengthen and make landfall in the Big Bend area of Florida tonight or early Friday bringing with it winds near 100 mph. After landfall, Helene is expected to turn northwestward and slow down over the Tennessee Valley on Friday and Saturday.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Ministers LeBlanc and Anand announce trucking pilot to improve movement of goods

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, (September 26), 2024 – Today, at the Committee on Internal Trade (CIT) meeting, the Honourable Dominic LeBlanc, Minister of Public Safety, Democratic Institutions and Intergovernmental Affairs, and the Honourable Anita Anand, President of the Treasury Board and Minister of Transport, announced the launch of a pilot project to mutually recognize regulatory requirements in the trucking sector.

    The ministers thanked the coalition of willing jurisdictions: Ontario; Nova Scotia; Manitoba; Prince Edward Island; Saskatchewan; Alberta; Newfoundland and Labrador; Northwest Territories; Yukon; and Nunavut for joining this effort to improve the efficient movement of goods — a crucial aspect to Canada’s productivity and affordability. The pilot project will be co-chaired by Newfoundland and Labrador and Canada.

    Mutual recognition agreements in key sectors, such as transportation and trucking, have the potential to boost Canada’s productivity and economic growth. Experts forecast that adopting mutual recognition as a means to reduce barriers to internal trade could increase Canada’s economy by $200 billion per year.

    Under this new trucking pilot, participating provinces and territories will commit to recognizing each other’s regulatory requirements, even where differences exist, such as oversized vehicle signage requirements, to allow trucks and the goods they carry to move across Canada more effectively, without compromising safety and security measures. The pilot, the first of its kind on this scale within Canada, will help governments test and measure what can be achieved through mutual recognition and will help drive future work in other important sectors of the economy, including labour mobility.

    Today’s announcement is an important first step towards wider, national adoption of mutual recognition and builds on the Government of Canada’s demonstrated leadership and action to liberalize trade and boost Canada’s economic productivity.

    Through federal leadership, including the Federal Action Plan to Strengthen Internal Trade, the Government of Canada has:

    • Launched the Canadian Internal Trade Data and Information Hub, providing open and accessible information on domestic trade and trade barriers in key economic sectors;
    • Removed and narrowed 1/3 of federal exceptions in the Canadian Free Trade Agreement, providing Canadian businesses with more opportunities to be competitive across the country;
    • Strengthened regulatory cooperation through the harmonization of building codes and energy efficiency regulations and exempting oil rigs from duplicative requirements; 
    • Funded the development of a National Registry of Physicians, led by the Medical Council of Canada, a foundational element that will support labour mobility for physicians;
    • Reviewed the Red Tape Reduction Act and made it a requirement for the one‑for‑one rule to control the administrative burden on business and to take into account burden reduced as a result of regulatory cooperation between the Government of Canada and other jurisdictions;
    • Advanced regulatory cooperation through the Canada-U.S. Regulatory Cooperation Council and the Federal-Provincial/Territorial Regulatory Reconciliation and Cooperation Table to reduce regulatory barriers to trade and make it easier for businesses to operate across multiple jurisdictions; and
    • Held regional roundtables in Canada and the United States to better understand the regulatory challenges businesses face when conducting business across internal and international borders.

    Additionally, as announced in August 2024, the Treasury Board of Canada is setting up a working group to examine productivity in Canada’s public sector and inform the government’s economic plan. The working group will be comprised of various experts from academia, think tanks, private and public sectors, and will engage with unions. It will examine the delivery of services to Canadians and the role of technology in helping address barriers to achieving greater efficiencies for Canadians and businesses. The working group’s mandate and terms of reference will be finalized and made public in the coming weeks.

    Gabriel Brunet
    Press Secretary
    Office of the Honourable Dominic LeBlanc
    Minister of Public Safety, Democratic Institutions and Intergovernmental Affairs
    819-665-6527
    gabriel.brunet@iga-aig.gc.ca

    Myah Tomasi
    Press Secretary
    Office of the President of the Treasury Board of Canada
    myah.tomasi@tbs-sct.gc.ca
    343-543-7210

    Media Relations
    Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
    Telephone: 613-369-9400
    Toll-free: 1-855-TBS-9-SCT (1-855-827-9728)
    Email: media@tbs-sct.gc.ca

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA News: Statement from President Joe  Biden on the Passing of William “Bill”  Lucy

    Source: The White House

    Bill Lucy was a courageous labor leader who dedicated his life bending the arc of history toward justice.

    Of his seven decades as a giant in the movement, Bill spent nearly forty years as Secretary-Treasurer of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees. He also founded the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists. No matter the title or the place, he worked tirelessly to advance civil rights and labor rights for all Americans, changing the course of history and redeeming the soul of America.

    His dedication led to increased benefits and protections for America’s public servants who keep our communities safe, care for the sick, and so much more.

    A native of Memphis, Tennessee, he marched with Dr. King to secure the rights of sanitation workers. Bill’s decree, “I Am a Man,” shed light on the humanity of our Nation’s laborers and became a nationwide rallying cry for dignity and equality, two of our most sacred American values.

    Over the course of his towering leadership, I saw Bill in action. He believed, like I do, that working class issues and civil rights issues are deeply intertwined, as he strengthened the role of Black Americans in our Nation’s unions and fought to dismantle apartheid in South Africa.

    He will forever be remembered for his unrelenting commitment to justice, fairness, and equality—at home and abroad.

    Jill and I send our love and condolences to his family, the labor movement he empowered, and every worker whose life he made better.

    May God bless Bill Lucy, a great American, and a good man.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Afghanistan: Calls for legal action against Taliban is ‘vital step’ to secure justice for women and girls

    Source: Amnesty International –

    © Kiana Hayeri / Amnesty International

    Taliban’s violation of women’s and girls’ rights likely amounts to a crime against humanity

    The international community should pursue all available avenues to end ongoing human rights violations in Afghanistan

    Governments also need to protect all those fleeing discrimination and oppression

    ‘The Taliban have made life for Afghan women and girls intolerable. They have erased them from all spheres of life’- Agnès Callamard

    Responding to the announcement by Australia, Canada, Germany, and the Netherlands during the UN General Assembly yesterday that they will initiate legal proceedings that could lead to action at the International Court of Justice against Afghanistan for numerous violations of the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, Agnès Callamard, Amnesty International’s Secretary General, said:

    “The Taliban have made life for Afghan women and girls intolerable. They have erased them from all spheres of life and systematically stripped away their rights and dignity.

    “Amnesty International welcomes any steps by states to hold the Taliban accountable under international law for the widespread and institutionalised violation of women’s and girls’ human rights, which most likely amount to the crime against humanity of gender persecution.

    “The international community should pursue all available avenues to end ongoing pervasive human rights violations in Afghanistan, including through the International Court of Justice.

    “This is a vital step towards securing justice for violations, it should be complemented by other comprehensive efforts to address the full range of past and ongoing atrocities, including those against women and girls, that the Taliban and other state and non-state actors have committed throughout the continuous cycle of conflict in Afghanistan for more than 40 years.

    “The world must act in solidarity with the courageous women and girls of Afghanistan by advocating for their rights and holding the Taliban regime to account.

    “This welcome legal initiative should also serve as a timely reminder that governments have a responsibility to provide international protection to all those fleeing systematic discrimination and oppression in Afghanistan.”

    View latest press releases

    MIL OSI NGO

  • MIL-OSI: Ninepoint Partners Announces Final September 2024 Cash Distribution for Ninepoint Cash Management Fund – ETF Series

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORONTO, Sept. 26, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ninepoint Partners LP (“Ninepoint Partners”) today announced the final September 2024 cash distribution for the Ninepoint Cash Management Fund – ETF Series. The record date for the distribution is September 27, 2024. This distribution is payable on October 7, 2024.

    The per-unit final September distribution is detailed below:

    Ninepoint ETF Series Ticker Cash Distribution per unit Notional Distribution per unit CUSIP
    Ninepoint Cash Management Fund NSAV $0.15667 $0.00000 65443X105


    About Ninepoint Partners

    Based in Toronto, Ninepoint Partners LP is one of Canada’s leading alternative investment management firms overseeing approximately $7 billion in assets under management and institutional contracts. Committed to helping investors explore innovative investment solutions that have the potential to enhance returns and manage portfolio risk, Ninepoint offers a diverse set of alternative strategies including Alternative Income and Real Assets, in addition to North American and Global Equities.

    For more information on Ninepoint Partners LP, please visit http://www.ninepoint.com or please contact us at 416.362.7172 or 1.888.362.7172 or invest@ninepoint.com.

    Ninepoint Partners LP is the investment manager to the Ninepoint Funds (collectively, the “Funds”). Commissions, trailing commissions, management fees, performance fees (if any), and other expenses all may be associated with investing in the Funds. Please read the prospectus carefully before investing. The information contained herein does not constitute an offer or solicitation by anyone in the United States or in any other jurisdiction in which such an offer or solicitation is not authorized or to any person to whom it is unlawful to make such an offer or solicitation. Prospective investors who are not resident in Canada should contact their financial advisor to determine whether securities of the Fund may be lawfully sold in their jurisdiction.

    Please note that distribution factors (breakdown between income, capital gains and return of capital) can only be calculated when a fund has reached its year-end. Distribution information should not be relied upon for income tax reporting purposes as this is only a component of total distributions for the year. For accurate distribution amounts for the purpose of filing an income tax return, please refer to the appropriate T3/T5 slips for that particular taxation year. Please refer to the prospectus or offering memorandum of each Fund for details of the Fund’s distribution policy.

    The payment of distributions and distribution breakdown, if applicable, is not guaranteed and may fluctuate. The payment of distributions should not be confused with a Fund’s performance, rate of return, or yield. If distributions paid by the Fund are greater than the performance of the Fund, then an investor’s original investment will shrink. Distributions paid as a result of capital gains realized by a Fund and income and dividends earned by a Fund are taxable in the year they are paid. An investor’s adjusted cost base will be reduced by the amount of any returns of capital. If an investor’s adjusted cost base goes below zero, then capital gains tax will have to be paid on the amount below zero.

    Sales Inquiries:

    Ninepoint Partners LP
    Neil Ross
    416-945-6227
    nross@ninepoint.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Wärtsilä to provide critical balancing capability for new Kentucky power plant

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    HOUSTON, Sept. 26, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Technology group Wärtsilä will supply the engineering and equipment for a new power plant project to be installed in Madisonville, Kentucky, USA. The order has been placed by Kentucky Municipal Energy Agency (KYMEA) and was booked by Wärtsilä in Q3, 2024. When commissioned, the plant will provide the grid balancing capabilities necessary to allow the utility to increase its share of energy from renewable sources. The power plant will also protect KYMEA’s members from price volatility in electricity markets.

    The KYMEA Energy Center I is a natural gas electric generating facility. The 75 MW plant will operate with four Wärtsilä 50SG engines running on natural gas. The fast starting and stopping feature of the engines will provide the flexibility and rapid response to fluctuations in the availability of wind and solar power.

    “The technology employed by the new KYMEA Energy Center I allows the units to seamlessly integrate with KYMEA’s renewable energy portfolio. The Wärtsilä engines will ensure that we can maintain a consistent and reliable energy supply. We are thrilled that this adaptability will make KYMEA Energy Center I a cornerstone in the transition to a more sustainable energy mix,” says Doug Buresh, President and CEO of KYMEA.

    KYMEA serves the current and future electric power and energy requirements of eleven Kentucky municipalities. The Energy Center is expected to be fully operational in spring 2027.

    “The flexibility and reliability of the Wärtsilä 50SG engines provide the needed support to the ongoing transition towards a decarbonised power sector,” comments Risto Paldanius, Vice President, Americas at Wärtsilä Energy. “The KYMEA project is a perfect example of this, and we are delighted to provide the technology that can deliver a sustainable energy solution to the utility.”

    Wärtsilä has a strong presence in the USA, having established its operations there in 1979. Wärtsilä North America Inc employs more than 900 professionals in 11 regional locations serving the commercial power, maritime and oil & gas markets in the United States.

    Media contact for more information on this release:

    Elena Hale
    Wartsila Energy
    elena@piper-communications.com

    Katri Pehkonen
    Communications Manager
    Wärtsilä Energy
    Mob: +358 50 591 6180
    katri.pehkonen@wartsila.com

    All Wärtsilä releases are available at http://www.wartsila.com/media/news-releases and at news.cision.com/wartsila-corporation where also the images can be downloaded. Use of the image(s) is allowed only in connection with the contents of this press release. Wärtsilä images are available at http://www.wartsila.com/media/image-bank.

    Wärtsilä in brief
    Wärtsilä is a global leader in innovative technologies and lifecycle solutions for the marine and energy markets. We emphasise innovation in sustainable technology and services to help our customers continuously improve environmental and economic performance. Our dedicated and passionate team of 17,800 professionals in more than 280 locations in 79 countries shape the decarbonisation transformation of our industries across the globe. In 2023, Wärtsilä’s net sales totalled EUR 6.0 billion. Wärtsilä is listed on Nasdaq Helsinki.
    http://www.wartsila.com

    Wärtsilä Energy in brief
    Wärtsilä Energy is at the forefront of the transition towards a 100% renewable energy future. We help our customers and the power sector to accelerate their decarbonisation journeys through our market-leading technologies and power system expertise. Our solutions include flexible engine power plants, energy storage and optimisation technology, and services for the whole lifecycle of our installations. Our engines are future-proof and can run on sustainable fuels. Our track record comprises 79 GW of power plant capacity, of which 18 GW are under service agreements, and over 125 energy storage systems, in 180 countries around the world.
    http://www.wartsila.com/energy

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/8c525ed8-1533-46ec-862d-1a7cf07c645d

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Security: New Minas — Statement from Superintendent Jason Popik, Southwest Nova District Policing Officer, in relation to RCMP member charged with assault

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    The Nova Scotia RCMP is sharing the following media release from the Nova Scotia Serious Incident Response Team (SiRT) in relation to its independent investigation into an allegation of misuse of force against an RCMP member posted to West Hants Detachment.

    On September 26, SiRT charged the member with Assault under Section 266 of the Criminal Code.

    This criminal charge is disconcerting and we take these incidents seriously. The member, Cpl. Dale Keeping, is currently on administrative duties. His duty status will be reviewed pending an internal code of conduct investigation and the court process.

    Media release issued by SiRT:

    The SiRT Charges RCMP Officer with Assault

    The Director of the Serious Incident Response Team (SiRT) has reasonable and probably grounds to believe that an RCMP officer committed a criminal offence in relation to the assaut of a youth on March 8, 2024.

    The SiRT received the referral on May 3, 2024, from the West Hants RCMP and the Department of Community Services and began its investigation into the matter that day. As a result of the SiRT investigation, on September 26, 2024, Corporal Dale Keeping was charged with assault contrary to s. 266 of the Criminal Code.

    Corporal Dale Keeping will appear before the Nova Scotia Provincial Court at 240 King Street, Windsor, Nova Scotia on October 29, 2024, at 10:00 a.m.

    As the matter is before the courts, and in consideration of the fair trial interests of the accused, the SiRT will not provide further comment on the investigation.

    The SiRT is responsible for investigating all matters that involve death, serious injury, sexual assault and intimate partner violence or other matters of public interest that may have arisen from the actions of any police officer in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. Investigations are under the direction and control of an independent civilian director, who has the sole authority to determine if charges should be laid at the conclusion of an investigation.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Canada: The new era of competition enforcement in Canada

    Source: Government of Canada News

    Notes for an address by Matthew Boswell, Commissioner of Competition to the Canadian Bar Association Competition Fall Law Conference – “The new era of competition enforcement in Canada” – September 2024

    Notes for an address by Matthew Boswell, Commissioner of Competition

    Canadian Bar Association Competition Fall Law Conference

    September 2024

    (As prepared for delivery)

    Good afternoon.

    I’m pleased to be back here with you again this year for the Fall Competition Law Conference.

    I would like to begin by acknowledging that we are gathered today on the traditional unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinaabeg People.

    We do so as Fall’s spectacular colours take hold here. And a centerpiece of that seasonal transformation—here and across much of Canada—is the maple tree.

    The growth of the maple tree gives us a good analogy for change: including the dramatic ones in competition law in Canada that I’m going to talk to you about today.

    You see, early on, maples grow upward…really fast. And then they expand outward to create their large canopy.

    The evolution of competition law in Canada has charted a similar course.

    That’s why today, I’m here to talk about the recent series of amendments made to the Competition Act. About what these changes mean for lawyers and the clients that many of you represent. And what it means for all Canadians. I’ll also talk about what doesn’t change with these recent reforms. So let’s get started.

    The new era

    Before the recent amendments to the Competition Act, in 2021, the Government made significant investments in the Bureau’s budget to enhance our ability to enforce the law and advocate for more competition.

    This has allowed us to tool up to meet the needs of Canada’s modern economy. This includes creating our Digital Enforcement and Intelligence Branch, which is leveraging data and technology to support our work in enforcement and competition promotion

    However, despite these new resources, we lacked the legislative tools to take the kind of enforcement action that Canadians, and parliamentarians, expect.

    As you know, since 2022, there have been three waves of amendments to Canada’s competition law. To name but a few of the highlights:

    • It started in 2022 with the criminalization of wage-fixing and no-poaching agreements and increasing maximum fines and penalties.
    • Then in 2023, the outdated efficiencies defense was scrapped, the rules around abuse of dominance were strengthened, and the Bureau was granted formal market study powers.
    • And, earlier this year, the Bureau was given more effective merger controls, including the introduction of structural presumptions, and stronger deceptive marketing provisions, that target bogus discount claims, drip pricing and unsupported environmental claims.

    That’s a lot of change over two short years.

    Not surprisingly, Canada’s legal community took notice and has been actively assessing the impacts of these wide-ranging changes. From that, came a growing consensus that we are now in “a new era” of competition law, of compliance and of enforcement.

    Words used by many of you, in your bulletins, to describe these changes have included – “landmark”, “transformative”, a “sea-change”, and my favourite – “breathtaking”.

    The Globe and Mail, in a July 2024 editorial called it: “The new era of consumer-friendly competition law.”

    The broad consensus on the need for reform isn’t new. The sense that Canada must do more to foster competition has been on everyone’s mind for quite a while.

    It was three years ago when I joined you, more than two years into my mandate and still virtual due to the COVID-19 pandemic, to call for a comprehensive review of the Competition Act. At the time that felt like a forlorn hope.

    It is hard to quantify just how much progress has been made since then.

    This has been driven by a groundswell of Canadians calling for change in response to an economy where competition simply was not working. Canadians have been clear – they want to see more competition.

    The desire for significant reform gathered steam in the House of Commons and in the Senate, where unanimous support across parties provided the momentum needed to turn these amendments into law.

    The fine details of these recent changes might not have universal agreement—laws rarely do. But there is unanimity that these efforts to modernize our laws are a legitimate, necessary response to the need to “do more”.

    This new era of competition enforcement is best thought of as generational change, rather than radical.

    Just as no one faults the maple tree for growing up and then outward as it adapts to its environment, our laws must respond to the needs and challenges of our economy as it is today. With these changes, the Government and Parliament are seeking to equip the Bureau with the right tools to achieve the outcomes we all want: a dynamic and competitive Canadian economy.

    To come back to the analogy of the maple, I see this new era much like the capable limbs on that hardy tree. The brilliant canopy has grown from the sapling of an idea: that greater competition will drive growth and provide a public good. This is something we all want to achieve.

    These changes are also consistent with the kind of broader, whole-of-government, competition agenda I have been calling for to help solve Canada’s productivity challenges.

    We can get there by doing the right thing: opening up markets, defining their rules, enforcing those rules, and giving everyone a fair shot at growth, opportunity and investment.

    What you can expect next

    Many of you will want to know how this modernized Competition Act will affect your clients. The changes are significant and wide reaching, and I understand the importance for you to hear from the Bureau on how we view the new lay of the land and how we intend to enforce the law going forward.

    As I see things, there are four big changes that will define how the Bureau works, thinks and responds.

    First, expect to see more enforcement action.

    I anticipate this will come both from the Bureau and through the expanded private access regime.

    These legislative changes have equipped the Bureau with the tools we need to take meaningful enforcement action. That means anti-competitive conduct won’t be slipping through the cracks the way it used to, owing to gaps in the law. It will also mean greater recourse to the Competition Tribunal and the courts to address non-compliance with the law.

    And, to the delight of many in the room I am sure, this will mean more case law.

    Second, expect to see faster enforcement that’s far less technocratic.

    The Competition Act now has streamlined legal tests, reverse onus requirements, and rebuttable presumptions for mergers. And as I mentioned a moment ago, the efficiencies defence has been repealed.

    These changes will allow the Bureau to triage and investigate cases faster. They should also result in outcomes of cases based on reasons that average people can understand.

    As an example of how these changes will streamline our work, we’re now unburdened by what was once hundreds of paragraphs of complex math formulae to determine whether a merger would run afoul of the Competition Act.

    It was high time that some common sense was brought back into our competition laws.

    The third thing you can expect is stronger remedies.

    We see that in terms of the new remedial standard for mergers, the broader range of remedies available under section 90.1, and our new civil mechanism for enforcing compliance with consent agreements. We also see it in the changes to maximum fines and penalties throughout the Act. We now have a greater ability to seek real, meaningful, penalties when the law is broken. This means the days of pennies-on-the-dollar financial penalties are over.

    And now, private applicants will have access to redress through private access to the Competition Tribunal.

    This all adds up to enforcement that means business: those who break the law will face meaningful consequences for their actions.

    The fourth and final thing you can expect from this new era is more people-focused enforcement.

    Implicit in the changes is that the provisions of the Act are much more focused on what Canadians need from their competition laws today, for example:

    • What’s in the public interest? Opening the door to public interest litigants will help determine the answer.
    • Recognizing the importance of competition to workers through the new wage-fixing and no-poaching offences, and by expressly incorporating a “labour” call-out in the merger provisions.
    • Ensuring that Canadian consumers have better protections against deceptive marketing practices, including guarding against the spread of drip pricing and bogus claims that deceive consumers and harm competitors.
    • Enhanced protections for whistleblowers, complainants and others that come forward and provide assistance under the Act under the new anti-reprisal provision.

    Overall, the amendments to the Act mean a more robust legal framework for competition law enforcement in Canada. It means a system that is more responsive to the needs of citizens. A system that is far less tolerant of anti-competitive conduct that misleads Canadian consumers, artificially raises prices and keeps wages low, and limits productivity and innovation.

    Just as I talked about how this new era will affect the way the Bureau works, let’s now talk about how this new era will affect the choices that businesses make.

    There are four areas that I want to highlight today, as I believe these will be of particular interest to all of you in this room.

    Mergers

    Let’s start with effective merger control. Having strong rules here is vital because it’s the first line of defense for us at the Bureau in our efforts to protect the competitiveness of our economy.

    For the vast majority of mergers, things won’t change in this new era. But in specific instances, there are big changes that certainly warrant attention.

    First, more mergers are now subject to pre-merger notification requirements. And, regardless of notification, in all cases where we apply for an injunction, a merger will not be able to close until the injunction is heard and decided. These changes clearly re-affirmed the preventative goal of merger review.

    Second, deals that are not notified will be subject to a longer limitation period within which we can bring a post-closing challenge if necessary. Concretely, that means there is now less risk of anti-competitive deals slipping past us.

    Third, you can expect much more healthy skepticism about proposed mergers in concentrated sectors. That’s as a result of the repeal of the efficiencies defense coupled with the creation of rebuttable structural presumptions. This puts an end to what was—in my view—an overly permissive approach to mergers or, as one of my predecessors described it, “the weakest merger law among all of our peer countries”.

    And fourth, among the other noteworthy changes affecting mergers, the remedy standard is now much stronger. That’s going to steer us toward remedies that—in both intent and effect—fully preserve and protect competition from anti-competitive mergers. This is a big improvement over where we were just a year ago.

    It does bear repeating: the vast majority of mergers reviewed under the Competition Act are non-complex and cleared quickly. That won’t change.

    But for those complex cases—especially those that raise significant competition issues—expect us to come knocking. In those cases, some parties will simply need to be well prepared to explain their proposed merger. But for those ill-conceived deals

    that are particularly anti-competitive, in this new era, those ideas should never leave the boardroom.

    I recognize that good guidance here will be vital. That’s why we will soon be launching a comprehensive review of the Merger Enforcement Guidelines. We’ll also be taking this opportunity to ensure we have modern guidelines that reflect the digital economy and the latest jurisprudence.

    As a part of this process, we will be publishing a discussion paper in the coming weeks that will include questions for your consideration. We hope that you will participate in this process in order to help us make these guidelines as useful and as rigorous as possible.

    A draft of the revised guidelines will follow. We value and appreciate the input of you and your clients. Your contributions to our guidance help create greater clarity for everyone.

    Monopolistic practices

    Let’s turn to item two on the list of noteworthy changes: monopolistic practices.

    It’s not bad to be big. Companies that grow large by innovating and competing on the merits should not be punished – this is a fundamental underpinning of the competitive process.

    The recent amendments do not change our thinking on this point. What does change is our ability to clearly define rule breakers, and the very real potential of meaningful penalties for violations. These changes finally align us with our peers.

    In this new era, we now have a streamlined test to determine whether there has been an abuse of dominance that would require a prohibition order. This will help us stop dominant-firm conduct that has either harmed competition in the marketplace or was intended to do so.

    Also, we have a significantly improved civil-agreement provision. It will allow us to address a broader range of anti-competitive agreements. This is coupled with more effective remedies to address harm and promote compliance.

    In this area, we have published new property controls guidance for public consultation. We see our position here as strong but responsible. However, we also remain open to other viewpoints. We welcome your feedback here before finalizing this guidance.

    Lastly on this point, we are preparing additional guidance on restrictive trade practices, and we will be consulting on that draft guidance as well.

    Deceptive marketing practices

    Next, let’s talk about how this new era will affect our enforcement in the area of deceptive marketing practices.

    This is an area where the Bureau needed an enforcement framework that was up to speed with the times. We needed the tools to do the best job possible in countering these age-old practices that harm consumers and undermine competition.

    First up is drip pricing. As you know, we have a long track record in successfully pursuing those who engage in this anti-competitive practice.

    Most recently, earlier this week, the Competition Tribunal handed down its decision in the Cineplex drip pricing case. This was a resounding win for Canadians, and a concrete example of our new era of competition enforcement.

    I recognize that Cineplex has announced its intention to appeal. However, I want to highlight that this is the first decision by the Tribunal to deal with the recent changes to the Competition Act, including the availability of higher administrative monetary penalties.

    The decision sends a strong message that businesses should not engage in drip pricing and need to display their full prices upfront whenever additional fees are mandatory for consumers. Businesses that fail to comply with the law risk significant financial penalties.

    Of course, we also recently secured two consent agreements in this area—against TicketNetwork and SiriusXM Canada. We also have several other active investigations. The overall lesson here is clear: expect pushback and consequences if you engage in false or misleading practices by advertising prices that are unattainable due to fees that aren’t included in the offer.

    Next up is an area that has seen a lot of ink spilled: the provisions about environmental claims and greenwashing. I can reassure you that, at the Bureau, we heard loud and clear that there’s a deep desire for guidance on these new provisions in the Act. We have and will move quickly here.

    While these changes are significant, it is important not to overlook the reality that prohibitions against greenwashing and unsupported performance claims already existed in our laws.

    The Competition Act has long had provisions prohibiting false or misleading claims to promote a product or a business interest. Case in point, look at the action we took against Keurig Canada in 2022. There, our investigation concluded the company’s claims about the recyclability of its single-use coffee pods were false or misleading. Keurig agreed to pay a $3 million penalty.

    Similarly, performance claims not based on adequate or proper testing have been prohibited in Canada since the 1930s. By extension, the Bureau has long advised businesses that these provisions apply to environmental claims. Not only have we published guidance and warnings for many years, we’ve also taken enforcement action in high-profile cases.

    With our past track record for context, you can see that these new provisions are an evolution—not a revolution—in addressing deceptive marketing practices. It means that advertisers are expected to have a foundation for their environmental claims, so that they’re not deemed false or misleading for consumers.

    As you know, we are consulting on these new provisions, and will carefully consider the feedback received. For now, I invite interested parties to read the special edition of Volume 7 of the Deceptive Marketing Practices Digest. It lays out some helpful advice on how to comply with the pre-existing provisions of the law when it comes to environmental claims.

    Private access

    Last but not least, I will share with you a few thoughts about changes to the private access regime in this new era.

    The amendments have created a much more robust private enforcement system. It now extends to most of our civil provisions. It is accessible by a broader range of applicants. This comes with an eased leave test and the possibility of monetary disgorgement payments.

    We welcome and support these changes, because they will complement the Bureau’s work, lead to more jurisprudence, and provide access to private redress.

    You can already start to see the impacts of these changes. It is being used as a tool in abuse-of-dominance cases, including Apotex, and JAMP Pharma. And that’s just for starters. More significant changes to the Act come into force in June 2025.

    We will be keeping a close eye on cases and scrutinizing them for opportunities to intervene and provide the Bureau’s perspective, particularly if there are important questions of law at stake. And I’m sure many of you in this room will be doing the same.

    We plan to update our Information Bulletin on private-access proceedings in light of these significant changes. This will include laying out the factors we will consider in deciding whether to intervene.

    I also want to state that we recognize the importance of having a properly resourced Competition Tribunal. As we move into a new era where we intend to bring more cases, and we anticipate a growing number of private access cases, this will only become more important to ensure timely and effective adjudication.

    What comes next?

    I’ve spent much of my time today walking you through what will I believe will change in competition law enforcement in Canada as a result of the recent amendments. And how those changes will affect your work.

    Yes, there’s widespread public support for a modernization of the Competition Act, and these changes bring Canada into alignment with international best practices. And yes, some changes still have some rough edges that will need sanding down to a smoother finish, be it through guidance or case law. That’s normal. Because this is framework law, after all, not a code.

    But, despite these significant changes, it’s also important to take note of what doesn’t change. This is still a framework law focused on maintaining and promoting competition in Canada, it is not sector-specific regulation or a price control regime.

    The Competition Act remains subject to robust due process protections, evidentiary requirements and leave standards, to ensure fairness for all parties and to weed out clearly unmeritorious cases. The Bureau will, of course, continue to apply the law in a transparent, predictable and rigorous manner. In other words, while the maple tree’s canopy may have expanded, its roots are the same.

    When it comes to the desire to ensure competition that’s fair and just in Canada, we’ve been threading that needle for nearly as long as Canada has been Canada. That doesn’t get talked about enough. New laws here are a response to an age-old problem.

    Way back in 1889, Canada was the first country in the world to introduce modern anti-trust legislation. Ours—along with similar laws in the US—was a response to serious problems faced by people in those young, emerging markets. That 135-plus year tradition continued on in the 20th century. In the 1920s, Prime Minister Mackenzie King himself introduced the first reading of the Combines Investigation Act, which was the foundation of today’s Competition Act.

    Next in the 1980s the Competition Act saw amendments via Bill C-91, in which the Minister of the day responsible for this portfolio said plainly that legislative changes were needed to “gear them to the requirements of a modern marketplace.”

    And that takes us to today’s changes—the latest segment on what’s been a long road.

    As I explained in the beginning of my remarks, generational change in competition law is here. Finally.

    To bring us back to the analogy of the maple:

    These are new limbs to fill out the figurative tree canopy of competition in Canada. It covers more with the rules and enforcement framework needed to keep pace with the economy of today. But it’s consistent with past principles. These changes are backed by a long tradition of commitment by the Bureau to transparent, evidence-based law enforcement.

    Conclusion

    As I conclude, I want to reiterate that this is a new era of competition enforcement in Canada. Today, we have a law that is significantly stronger, one that finally addresses many of the longstanding inadequacies of the Competition Act.

    As I have stated, we are developing guidance to provide clarity on what these changes will mean for the Bureau and for your clients. And we will want to hear from you to help us refine it.

    However, Canadians’ and Parliamentarians’ message has been clear — they want to see stronger and more active enforcement. These recent amendments have equipped us with the right tools to do just that.

    I want to leave you with a clear takeaway: in this new era you should expect a more aggressive and active enforcer, one that will be using all the tools at our disposal for the benefit of Canadians and the Canadian economy.

    These changes were long overdue, and it is now my role as Commissioner of Competition to see them implemented in a way that meets the high expectations of Canadians and Parliamentarians’.

    So buckle up.

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Government of Canada and Partners Pave Way for Standardized Mental Health and Substance Use Care

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    Government of Canada and Partners Pave Way for Standardized Mental Health and Substance Use Care New series of guidance and resources promote equitable access to quality care for all

    New series of guidance and resources promote equitable access to quality care for all

    September 26, 2024 | Ottawa, Ontario | Health Canada

    Everyone in Canada deserves a health system that provides each of us with access to the services we need, when and where we need them. The availability and types of mental health and substance use supports can vary across Canada, which can lead to inconsistencies in quality and accessibility.

    To help address this challenge, Health Canada commissioned the Standards Council of Canada to coordinate the development of a series of guidelines and resources to promote better understanding, alignment, and integration among mental health and substance use health care providers throughout the country.

    These resources include:

    • Guidance document on Integrated Youth Services (IYS)
    • Report on the integration of Mental Health and Substance Use Health Care services in primary care settings
    • Report on gaps and recommendations related to Mental Health and Substance Use Health Care digital apps
    • Report on integrated Mental Health and Substance Use Health Care services for people with complex needs – with a focus on early psychosis intervention
    • Publicly available specification to formalize substance use health competencies for all prescribers
    • Report on gaps and opportunities for improving substance use health-related withdrawal management services

    This work can inform better care for people across Canada by promoting evidence-based approaches across key mental health and substance use health issues. Recognizing that the delivery of health care is primarily the responsibility of provinces and territories, this work offers mental health and substance use health care providers a collection of principles, guidance, and best practices that they can refer to, learn from, and put into action.

    It will also help guide federal actions in support of positive mental health and substance use health in the future; reduce barriers to care; and address limited front-line workforce capacity.

    Hundreds of Canadians contributed their energy and expertise to this initiative, including people with lived and living experience, Indigenous peoples, clinical experts, service providers, community organizations, family and peer advocates, academics, and more. Health Canada would like to thank everyone who contributed to this important body of work with a special acknowledgement to the Co-Chairs of the Steering Committee, Dr. Carol Hopkins and Dr. Brian Rush, for their leadership and wisdom, which guided this process.

    Yuval Daniel
    Director of Communications
    Office of the Honourable Ya’ara Saks
    Minister of Mental Health and Addictions and Associate Minister of Health
    819-360-6927

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Readout of the Secretary-General’s meeting with H.E. Mr. William Samoei Ruto, C.G.H., President of the Republic of Kenya and Commander-in-Chief of the Defence Forces

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    The Secretary-General met with H.E. Mr. William Samoei Ruto, C.G.H., President of the Republic of Kenya and Commander-in-Chief of the Defence Forces. They discussed Kenya’s leadership of the Multinational Security Support Mission in Haiti (MSS), regional peace and security, including sustainable financing for AU-led peace support operations, and ongoing efforts to strengthen the United Nations Office at Nairobi (UNON) and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Readout of the Secretary-General’s meeting with H.E. Mr. Muhammad Yunus, Chief Adviser of the interim Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    The Secretary-General met with H.E. Mr. Muhammad Yunus, Chief Adviser of the interim Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh. The Secretary-General expressed appreciation for the close cooperation between the United Nations and Bangladesh, including its contributions to peacekeeping, and reiterated UN readiness to support Bangladesh in its ongoing transition and reform process. The Secretary-General and the Chief Adviser also discussed the Rohingya refugee crisis and climate change.
     

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Readout of the Secretary-General’s meeting with H.E. Sir Keir Starmer, Prime Minister and First Lord of the Treasury of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    The Secretary-General met with H.E. Sir Keir Starmer, Prime Minister and First Lord of the Treasury of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. The Secretary-General and Mr. Starmer discussed the strong partnership between the United Nations and the United Kingdom as well as developments related to the war in Ukraine and the situation in the Middle East. They also exchanged views on the achievements of the Pact for the Future, and the implementation of its outcomes.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Lee Targets Privacy Loophole with Student Voter Data Protection Act

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Utah Mike Lee
     
    WASHINGTON – Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) introduced the Student Voter Data Protection Act, a bill to safeguard the personal data of college students from being exploited for partisan voter registration efforts. This legislation amends the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) to explicitly prohibit students’ private information from being shared without their consent for voter registration drives. Senator Eric Schmitt (R-MO) is an original co-sponsor of the bill.
    In recent years, colleges and universities nationwide have participated in the National Study of Learning, Voting, and Engagement (NSLVE), which compels institutions to hand over students’ FERPA-protected data. This data is then passed through the National Student Clearinghouse (NSC) and shared with third-party voter processing companies. Without student consent, these companies match student information with voter databases, returning lists of voters and non-voters to participating schools.
    “College students’ personal data should not be handed over to partisan organizations under the guise of civic engagement,” said Senator Lee. “These practices violate federal privacy laws, and my bill will close the loopholes that allow institutions to disregard the consent of their students.”
    The Student Voter Data Protection Act would amend FERPA to ensure that universities cannot share students’ personally identifiable information for voter registration activities unless the student gives explicit consent. The legislation responds to ongoing concerns that organizations like Civic Nation, an affiliate of the Obama Foundation, are using this data to target student voters with left-leaning get-out-the-vote efforts.
    Key Provisions of the Bill:
    Amends FERPA to explicitly prevent universities from sharing student data without consent for voter registration purposes.
    Ensures that voter registration efforts do not exploit students’ private information for partisan gain.
    Protects college students from being targeted based on their voting history or registration status.
    The introduction of the Student Voter Data Protection Act follows concerns that the NSLVE initiative has been used to create a voter profile of students, often without their knowledge or consent, to fuel politically motivated campaigns. By tightening FERPA protections, the Student Voter Data Protection Act seeks to preserve the integrity of student privacy and ensure that educational institutions adhere to federal privacy laws.

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  • MIL-OSI USA: Bennet, Hickenlooper Introduce Public Lands Legislation to Protect Gunnison Basin and Surrounding Regions

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Colorado Michael Bennet
    Washington, D.C. — Colorado U.S. Senators Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper introduced the Gunnison Outdoor Resources Protection (GORP) Act to permanently protect key portions of the Gunnison Basin and the surrounding regions through a variety of public land management tools, including special designations focused on recreation, wildlife, scientific research, and conservation. 
    The bill is based on over a decade of collaboration with local governments, Tribes, and public lands user groups. It has the bipartisan support of six counties in Western Colorado, as well as the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe and local municipalities. A wide variety of local businesses and public lands user groups, including summer and winter motorized recreation, conservation, mountain biking, whitewater recreation, rock climbers, ranchers, water users, and hunters and anglers, also support the bill. 
    “For over a decade, Coloradans have come together at trailheads and kitchen tables to share their love for the spectacular landscape in and around Gunnison County,” said Bennet. “This bill proves that people with wide-ranging interests can forge compromise and develop a common vision to protect our public lands for future generations.”
    “Adventurers across Colorado and the country come to the Gunnison Basin for its rugged canyons and untamed wilderness,” said Hickenlooper. “Protecting these additional 730,000 acres will help keep it that way for generations.”
    “Land is very important to the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe and throughout history we have lost a lot of land that has been taken from the tribe unjustly,” said Manuel Heart, Chairman Ute Mountain Ute Tribe. “To get land back for the tribe by putting it into Trust status as this legislation does, is important to the tribe’s children and grandchildren. The Ute Mountain Ute Tribe appreciates Senator Bennet’s work on the GORP Act, supports the legislation and hopes it will move forward quickly in the US Senate.” 
    “Colorado’s great outdoors are known around the world and this bill marks a valuable step in the need to protect the incredible Gunnison Basin for future generations of Coloradans and visitors,” said Colorado Governor Jared Polis. “I appreciate Senator Bennet’s leadership on this issue and look forward to seeing this bill move forward.”
    “As a former resident of the Gunnison Valley and Western Colorado University graduate, I am intimately aware of the importance public lands, wildlife and outdoor recreation are to local communities’ economy and environment,” said Dan Gibbs, Executive Director, Colorado Department of Natural Resources. “Our forests, water, wildlife and open spaces are some of our most precious natural resources and outdoor recreation drives visitors and residents to our state to enjoy our diverse opportunities. I commend the work of Senator Bennet and the many diverse stakeholders on developing the locally driven Gunnison Outdoor Resources Protection Act. Introduction is a great first step and I look forward to working alongside all interested parties as this legislation makes its way through the U.S. Congress.”
    “The GORP Act reflects the way we do business in Gunnison County: we sit down with our neighbors to find common-ground solutions and a way forward to best serve our community. Public lands are our backyard here and I’m proud of the work we’ve done to bring so many stakeholders – snowmobilers, ranchers, mountain bikers, and conservationists to name a few – together,” said Jonathan Houck, Gunnison County Commissioner. “While GORP started in Gunnison County, I couldn’t be happier to stand with five neighboring Western Slope counties in support of this legislation, and I thank Senator Bennet for listening to our communities.”
    “Delta County is glad to have worked with Senator Bennet on the GORP Act,” said the Delta County Commissioners. “Its provisions for Delta County will provide public access to a boat ramp, ensure that the BLM can continue to permit existing motorized boat use, and bring forward a thoughtful balance of uses on public lands in the North Fork Valley. This legislation shows what’s possible when we roll up our sleeves and work together.”
    “The Saguache County Board of Commissioners are pleased to support the introduction of Senator Bennet’s Gunnison Outdoor Resources Protection Act (GORP), and eagerly anticipate the passing of this legislation,” said the Saguache County Commissioners. “We appreciate the multi years the many stakeholders have committed to this project.”
    “Pitkin County Is a strong supporter of public lands, and we believe in designating new Wilderness areas in sensitive landscapes, where appropriate,” said Greg Poschman, Chairman, Pitkin County Board of Commissioners. “We are incredibly grateful to Senator Bennet for his work on the GORP Act, and we look forward to celebrating the two proposed Wilderness designations in Colorado’s wild and pristine high country.”
    “Hinsdale County was proud to have collaborated with Senator Bennet, Gunnison County and Ouray County on the GORP Act,” said Kristie Borchers, Chair, Hinsdale County Board of County Commissioners. “We are excited that a key portion of the scenic Cimarron area where Hinsdale, Ouray and Gunnison County come together will be protected by this legislation. This bill will help protect our watersheds and the landscapes that attract the visitors who help drive our mountain town economies in the San Juan Mountains. We look forward to seeing the GORP Act move forward in Congress.”
    “The GORP Act sets the bar for collaborative and beneficial legislation,” said Lynn Padgett, Vice-Chair, Ouray County Board of County Commissioners. “I am forever grateful to Senator Bennet and his team and stakeholders like Gunnison, Hinsdale, and Ouray Counties for enthusiastically working together to include the proposed Uncompahgre Wilderness expansion and especially for protecting Turret Ridge. The peaks of the Cimarron range are unique in their scenery and geology. The GORP Act not only protects important migration areas for elk and key habitats for lynx and moose. The GORP Act protects our precious wildlands, vital to our local economy and quality of life.”
    “Our groups have worked for nearly a decade to craft a vision for public lands in and around Gunnison County that will benefit our economy, environment, and quality of life into the future,” said members of the Gunnison Public Lands Initiative in a joint statement. “The GORP Act reflects the countless hours we spent working together and with communities around the Gunnison Basin. We are eager to see this thoughtful and well-vetted legislation signed into law.”
    Background
    The GORP Act will protect over 730,000 acres of public lands in Western Colorado, safeguarding the region’s local economy, world-class recreation, ranching heritage, wildlife habitat, and clean air and water. The bill also includes provisions for recreational boating in Delta County and at the request of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, transfers the Pinecrest Ranch from fee ownership to trust ownership. 
    Senator Bennet drafted the GORP Act at the request of Gunnison County and based on a proposal from the Gunnison Public Lands Initiative. The bill also reflects the input from surrounding counties and feedback Senator Bennet received during a public comment period held in 2022. 
    The text of the bill is available HERE. Maps of the areas designated by the bill are HERE. A summary of the bill is HERE. You can find additional information, including support letters and answers to frequently asked questions on the GORP Act website HERE.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Bennet, Caraveo, Bipartisan Colleagues Introduce Resolution to Recognize Hispanic Restaurant Owners

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Colorado Michael Bennet
    Washington, D.C. — Colorado U.S. Senator Michael Bennet and U.S. Representative Yadira Caraveo joined bipartisan Senate and House colleagues to introduce a resolution celebrating  Hispanic Restaurant Week. From September 22nd through October 3rd, the designation recognizes the hard work and contributions of Hispanic restaurant owners and employees in Colorado and across the country. 
    “Through their rich culinary traditions and hard work, Hispanic restaurant workers and owners contribute significantly to our communities and economy,” said Bennet. “Hispanic Restaurant Week celebrates the profound influence of Colorado and the nation’s Hispanic community on our national palette, and I’m grateful to stand with Rep. Yadira Caraveo to honor them with this resolution.” 
    “The Hispanic community enriches the culture, heritage and history of Colorado. The many Hispanic-owned restaurants in our community are a result of their hard work and conviction to build a better future for themselves and their families. Today, we are presenting a Hispanic Restaurant Week Resolution with the support of both parties and both chambers. This is a special occasion to celebrate the many contributions these restaurants —and the hardworking families who run them— bring to our communities.” said Caraveo.
    In addition to Bennet and Caraveo, U.S. Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and U.S. Representatives Nanette Barragan (D-Calif.), Maria Salazar (R-Fla.), and Juan Ciscomani (R-Ariz.) also cosponsored the resolution.
    This resolution is endorsed by the Hispanic Restaurant Association.
    The text of the resolution is available HERE. 

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  • MIL-OSI USA: Cantwell, Collins Release GAO Report Revealing Federal Government is Ill-Equipped to Handle Cost of Climate Change

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Washington Maria Cantwell
    09.26.24
    Cantwell, Collins Release GAO Report Revealing Federal Government is Ill-Equipped to Handle Cost of Climate Change
    Conservative estimates find climate impacts will cost federal government many trillions of dollars
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) published a new report requested by Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA), Chair of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, and Senator Susan Collins (R-ME), Vice Chair of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, on the economic impacts of climate change to the federal government.
    The report, titled Climate Resilience: Congressional Action Needed to Enhance Climate Economics Information and to Limit Federal Fiscal Exposure, warns that “Available estimates indicate significant projected costs to the economy and the federal government as a result of climate change,” and that “the federal government is currently not well-organized to manage this reality.”
    “This bipartisan request to GAO to ask how much taxpayers are at risk has revealed we have big exposure.  We already know we are being buffeted by more frequent wildfires, shrinking snowpacks, coastal erosion, and harmful ocean acidification. This report makes clear that Congress should act to limit the U.S. government’s alarming fiscal exposure due to the intensifying impacts of climate change,” Sen. Cantwell said.
    “In Maine, our economy is inextricably linked to the environment. From rising sea levels to warming waters to damaging storms, the impacts of climate change are already threatening our working waterfronts and coastal communities,” said Sen. Collins. “This nonpartisan GAO report Senator Cantwell and I requested contains astonishing numbers about the cost of climate-related weather events to the federal government. These findings support the need for a coordinated plan by the federal government to increase climate resiliency efforts and improve reporting of climate-related financial risks.”
    After reviewing agency documents, conducting literature reviews, and interviewing government experts, the GAO discovered that federal agencies currently have little capacity to analyze or report climate-related risks, making it difficult to evaluate potential climate resilience actions or investments the U.S. government could take to lessen future damages and ultimately save taxpayers money.
    GAO’s work on costs to the federal government follows eye-opening analysis last November in the Fifth National Climate Assessment that found the cost of climate damages to the entire U.S. economy from extreme weather events is already $1.5 trillion per decade. This number is a conservative estimate that does not account for loss of life, health care-related costs, or damages to ecosystem services noted the authors, which include federal science agencies whose assessment was reviewed by external experts and required by statute.
    GAO’s report identified six key sectors of great financial risk to the federal government due to the projected impacts of climate change: crop insurance, coastal disaster relief, health care expenditures, wildland fire suppression, flood insurance, and sea level rise. By synthesizing scientific and economic analysis across different government and private-sector sources, GAO reported that changes in the first four sectors would cost the federal government an estimated $18 billion annually by midcentury and nearly $69 billion annually by late century. Payouts for flood insurance are estimated to increase by nearly $4 billion per year by 2050, and hurricanes alone are projected to reduce America’s balance sheet by $36 billion per year by 2050 in a high emissions future.

    Additionally, there are more than 160,000 federal buildings in a current 500-year flood plain valued at over $490 billion that are at ever increasing risk of flooding due to climate change, while damages to federal facilities due to sea level rise may be even worse. GAO noted that these sectors are not comprehensive and climate change has many other significant impacts, including falling tax revenues due to decreased real estate values, household income, and business revenues.

    This report builds on an October 2017 GAO report requested by Senators Cantwell and Collins on the costs of climate change to the federal government.
    The full 2024 GAO report can be found HERE.

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  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Cohen Announces $3.3 Million National Park Service Grant to Gooch Park

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Steve Cohen (TN-09)

    MEMPHIS – Congressman Steve Cohen (TN-9) today announced that Gooch Park, a 10.2-acre greenspace with an outdoor pool, pavilion, and playing fields, will receive a National Park Service Outdoor Recreation Legacy grant of $3,339,000 to make major improvements. The park, one of the first in Memphis designated for African Americans and named for philanthropists Cecil Milton and Boyce Alexander Gooch, who were known for providing scholarships and educational support to West Tennessee colleges, including Rhodes, was dedicated in 1957. In 2022, artist Jamond Bullock painted a mural for the neighborhood pool.

    Congressman Cohen made the following statement:

    “This major investment in Gooch Park will invigorate an already-vibrant North Memphis neighborhood and bring upgrades encouraging recreational activities for the entire neighborhood. I’m pleased to see this federal investment in a historically important neighborhood park.”

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