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Amnesty International Names Kaepernick Its Ambassador Of Conscience

Former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick receives the Amnesty International Ambassador of Conscience Award for 2018 in Amsterdam Saturday. Kaepernick became a controversial figure when he refused to stand for the national anthem, and instead knelt to protest racial inequality and police brutality.

Peter Dejong/AP

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Peter Dejong/AP

Amnesty International has given Colin Kaepernick its top human rights award for his public opposition to racial injustice. The former San Franciso 49ers quarterback is Amnesty’s 2018 Ambassador of Conscience

Teri Schultz reports for our Newscast unit that the “take a knee” campaign that won Kaepernick honor likely cost him his job:

Accepting the award in Amsterdam, the capital of the Netherlands, Kaepernick said he shares it “with all of the countless people throughout the world combating the human rights violations of police officers.”

“Kaepernick launched a massive controversy in 2016 for kneeling while the national anthem was played to protest police brutality. When other players joined him, President Trump called on team owners to fire them.

“San Francisco released Kaepernick and he hasn’t been signed by any other team.

“Amnesty International Secretary General Salil Shetty says the “vitriol” Kaepernick’s peaceful protest evoked from people in power makes his “commitment all the more remarkable.”

The Associated Press reports:

“In Kaepernick’s acceptance speech, the award-winner described police killings of African-Americans and Latinos in the United States as lawful lynchings.

“Racialized oppression and dehumanization is woven into the very fabric of our nation — the effects of which can be seen in the lawful lynching of black and brown people by the police, and the mass incarceration of black and brown lives in the prison industrial complex,” Kaepernick said.

“How can you stand for the national anthem of a nation that preaches and propagates, ‘freedom and justice for all,’ that is so unjust to so many of the people living there?” he said at Saturday’s award ceremony.”

Previous award recipients include anti-Apartheid campaigner and South African President Nelson Mandela and Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani schoolgirl who campaigned for girls’ right to education even after surviving being shot by Taliban militants.

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Puerto Rico Board, Governor Clash Over Finances

Still reeling from damages caused by Hurricane Maria, Puerto Rico’s financial situation is in major free fall. The federal oversight board ordered Gov. Ricardo Rosselló to cut public pensions by 10 percent.

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

We want to head to Puerto Rico now. The damage caused by Hurricane Maria is not the island’s only crisis. It is also in the middle of a fiscal crisis. To start turning that around, this week, a federal board with power over the island’s finances ordered the governor to cut public pensions. NPR’s Adrian Florido reports that the governor said, no, setting up a battle for control of the island’s financial future.

ADRIAN FLORIDO, BYLINE: Shortly after the governor said no, Franciso Flores was sitting on a plaza near the governor’s mansion. He’s 64, a retired mechanic for the city of San Juan. He lives on his government pension.

FRANCISO FLORES: (Speaking Spanish).

FLORIDO: He says, “Puerto Rico’s pensions allow you to survive, nothing more.” But he says his pension is 600 a month at a few hundred in Social Security, and his monthly income is about $1000. That’s right around the poverty line.

FLORES: (Speaking Spanish).

FLORIDO: On top of that, Flores says, “the price of utilities and food is going up.” He says he probably couldn’t live on less than he does now. But he may have to, and here’s why. Puerto Rico has been massively in debt for years. In 2016, Congress did two things to pull it out of its fiscal crisis. It allowed the island to seek protection from its creditors, and it created the financial oversight board with power over the island’s finances. This week, the board ordered a long list of cost-cutting measures, including cutting public pensions an average of 10 percent. To Flores, it came as no surprise. He holds a view held by many on the island.

FLORES: (Speaking Spanish).

FLORIDO: “Here in Puerto Rico,” he says, “it’s that fiscal board that has the power, not the governor.” The governor, Ricardo Rossello, has said, not so fast.

RICARDO ROSSELLO: On matters of public policy, it is the government that has the decision-making power.

FLORIDO: Rossello has said he will implement many of the board’s cost-cutting measures, but has refused to cut pensions or vacation or sick time or Christmas bonuses for workers.

ROSSELLO: And so on those matters that we oppose – those are just not going to be seen in the legislature nor in my desk.

FLORIDO: Puerto Rico is very much still recovering from Hurricane Maria as it prepares for the next hurricane. At the same time, an even larger struggle is playing out. Its governor and the federal oversight board are in a war of words over who has the power to set the island’s fiscal policy. On Thursday, Jose Carrion, the federal board’s chairman, issued a warning.

(SOUNBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

JOSE CARRION: (Through interpreter) We hope the government and the legislature will comply. We don’t want to sue the government, but we have to fulfill the duties that we understand the law gives us.

MARIELY LOPEZ-SANTANA: It’s basically a question of sovereignty, autonomy and, in the end, who is ultimately responsible for making decisions in Puerto Rico?

FLORIDO: Mariely Lopez-Santana is a political scientist at George Mason University. She says the question of who gets the last word on fiscal policy can’t be answered yet. The board’s powers haven’t been fully tested in court. Professor Lopez-Santana points out that, in fact, the board and the governor agree on many policies – tax reform, cuts to the school system, consolidating government agencies and selling off the island’s electrical grid. But politically, Lopez-Santana says the governor has to oppose the board.

LOPEZ-SANTANA: The governor cares about winning election, so even if it’s cheap talk, he’s gonna say, well, I’m gonna protect my people. I’m going to protect pensions – all that.

FLORIDO: Rossello has asked the members of the oversight board to reconsider their demands. If they don’t, the governor says he’s prepared to fight the board in court. Adrian Florido, NPR News, San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Copyright © 2018 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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Saturday Sports: NBA Playoffs And Major League Baseball

NPR’s Scott Simon talks sports with ESPN’s Howard Bryant. They’ll cover the surprises of the NBA playoffs so far and the historically hot start by baseball’s Boston Red Sox.

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

Don’t despair about the world. It’s time for sports.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

SIMON: The Red Sox are red-hot. We’re about halfway through everyone’s least favorite round of the NBA playoffs. But first, Howard Bryant of ESPN joins us. Howard, thanks so much for being with us.

HOWARD BRYANT: Good morning, Scott.

SIMON: Any NBA games worth watching before the Cleveland Cavaliers come roaring back to take everything?

BRYANT: (Laughter) You know, Scott, I was wondering how long it was going to take for you to mention the Cleveland Cavaliers. I don’t know. I got to tell you. I think that this might be it for the reign of King James. LeBron James has been to the NBA finals every year since 2011. His team is really not that good this year. And they lost a game last night. They should have won to Indiana. They’re down 2-1. Obviously, nobody would bet against LeBron. But if it’s going to happen that he’s – you don’t win every single year. This one very well may be the year. They’re not the best team. They’re not playing particularly great. And he’s looking like he did during his first reign in Cleveland, which is he’s really, really good. But everybody else isn’t that good.

SIMON: But Cleveland rocks. Listen. Houston and the Warriors seem to be on cruise control. And, of course, Steph Curry is coming back. But what about Philadelphia and New Orleans?

BRYANT: Well, that’s the fun part of this, Scott – is that you – for the first time in a long time, you start to see a team in the post season – usually the first round is the one you fall asleep on. But the Philadelphia 76ers are looking like the very best team in the Eastern Conference right now – not just maybe for this post season. But certainly next year and the following years, they’re going to be a team to reckon with. I think that in the Western Conference, yes, it is no question that the matchup everybody wants to see is Houston versus Golden State. The Warriors have been the best team in the league for the last three years and – the last four years now. And I think that the Rockets have been built to beat them. So this is the matchup.

However, just like Philadelphia in the East, I really like New Orleans with Anthony Davis. And you’re starting to see that team play really, really well. They’re up 3-0 on the Portland Trailblazers. And so it’s not as boring a first round as it used to be. I think there are some teams if you’re a big NBA fan – and the NBA has had a great season this year – that there’s a lot to look forward to. And it’s not just ho-hum waiting to see if it’s going to be LeBron and the Cavaliers against Golden State like the last couple of years.

SIMON: So the baseball season opened. Red Sox lost opening day. And almost not since, they’re 17 and 2. How are they doing it?

BRYANT: Well, they’re doing it because they’re hitting the ball. I remember last year, after David Ortiz retired, the Red Sox couldn’t score. That’s one thing that you never would think – that team playing in Fenway Park, that they weren’t going to be able to score runs. Well, this year they’re scoring lots of runs. And they’ve got a 66 – or 68-run differential in terms of runs scored versus runs given up. And they are – they’re doing it with pitching. They’re doing it with everything.

And I think that this is actually sort of fun because at the end of last season you were thinking Dodgers. You were thinking Astros. You were thinking the Yankees came a game away from making the World Series. The Red Sox lost to Houston last year in the first round of the playoffs. So now you’ve got three, four, five teams that are actually going to really be in there and a resurgent Red Sox, resurgent Yankees, world champion Astros – pretty fun stuff.

SIMON: Howard Bryant, thanks so much.

BRYANT: Thank you.

Copyright © 2018 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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The Week in Movie News: Steven Spielberg Tapped for a DC Superhero Movie, Summer Movie Preview and More

Avengers Infinity War

Need a quick recap on the past week in movie news? Here are the highlights:

MOVIE PREVIEW

Our summer movie guide is here: We put the spotlight on more than 40 upcoming major releases arriving over the next few months in our summer movie preview. Read the whole thing starting with Avengers: Infinity War here.

Ready Player One

BIG NEWS

M.A.S.K. and He-Man movies get interesting new directors: Two long-awaited movies based on ’80s toys are finally coming together with F. Gary Gray (pictured above) taking the helm of M.A.S.K. and the Nee Brothers tackling Master of the Universe. Read more on these two possible franchise starters here and here.

Lincoln

GREAT NEWS

Cathy Yan to direct Harley Quinn movie: Margot Robbie wanted a woman director on her Harley Quinn-focused Suicde Squad spin-off, and she got one in Sundance winner Cathy Yan. Read more here.

Lincoln

SURPRISING NEWS

Steven Spielberg takes on the DCEU: Another surprise director heading to the DCEU is Steven Spielberg, who previously helmed an animated comic book movie with The Adventures of Tintin. Now he’s fittingly adapting the World War II series Blackhawk for the big screen. Read more here.

COOL CULTURE

Gabriel Luna as the new Terminator: This week, the Terminator reboot added a few new faces, including Gabriel Luna as the new killing machine from the future. Read more about that here and see BossLogic’s rendering of what he might look like as the Terminator below.

Congratulations to my boy @IamGabrielLuna#Terminatorpic.twitter.com/zYO7C0V9p2

— BossLogic (@Bosslogic) April 14, 2018

EXCLUSIVE BUZZ

David Leitch on Deadpool 2 and Hobbs and Shaw: We talked to Deadpool 2 director David Leitch about that upcoming sequel, the planned Atomic Blonde follow-up and the Hobbs and Shaw Fast and the Furious spin-off. Read the two-part interview here and here.

MUST-WATCH TRAILERS

Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom reveals a worse threat than dinosaurs: The final trailer for Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom arrived with a lot more footage hinting that mankind is the true monster. Watch it below.

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The Equalizer 2 brings back a most dangerous Denzel: Even more deadly than dinosaurs, maybe, is Denzel Washington in The Equalizer 2. Watch the first trailer for the sequel below and see our exclusive new images from the movie here.

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Deadpool 2 introduces Peter: Despite all the well-known superhero characters introduced in Deadpool 2, the latest, final trailer is mostly being talked about for a new, power-less guy called Peter. Watch it below.

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Wells Fargo Fined $1 Billion Over Mortgage And Auto Loans

Wells Fargo will pay a $1 billion fine to settle claims that it had taken advantage of mortgage and auto loan customers. Federal regulators also said the bank did not have adequate compliance or risk management programs.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

Wells Fargo Bank has agreed to pay up to a billion dollars to settle allegations that it overcharged people for auto and mortgage loans, among other things. The fines were imposed by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, marking the first major action against a bank by the Trump administration. This is just the latest blow for the bank. We’re joined by NPR’s Jim Zarroli for more. Hi, Jim.

JIM ZARROLI, BYLINE: Hi, Ari.

SHAPIRO: Remind us what the bank is accused of.

ZARROLI: This has to do with allegations about the way Wells Fargo handled some of its customers’ mortgages and auto loans. It’s accused of attaching improper charges to some of them. And this comes on top of the really big scandal you may remember that happened in 2016 when the bank was found to have opened some 3.5 million accounts for its customers without their knowledge. And federal regulators say these things were happening, and senior management really didn’t do enough to stop them.

SHAPIRO: We should say that Wells Fargo is an NPR funder. What do the banks say about these charges?

ZARROLI: It has acknowledged that it did a lot of things wrong. It says it’s working to change them, to reform. The senior management of the bank was basically forced out after the scandals happened. There’s a new CEO, and he said – there was a statement today in which he said, we have more work to do, but we have the same priorities as our regulators and we are committed to working with them.

SHAPIRO: A billion dollars sounds like a really big number. How much will it actually hurt a bank the size of Wells Fargo?

ZARROLI: Well, it kind of depends on how you look at it. I mean, this is a bank with $2 trillion in assets. So, you know, compared to that, a billion isn’t very much. The bank earned nearly $6 billion in profits during the first three months of this year. You know. So how much does this hurt the bank? You know, I put that question to Lawrence White, who is a professor at New York University and an expert on banking, and here’s what he had to say.

LAWRENCE WHITE: It’s not going to cripple the bank, but nobody likes to write a check that has 10 digits on it.

ZARROLI: And then we have to keep in mind that Wells Fargo also faces lawsuits from its customers who were hurt by some of the things the bank has done and allowed to have happened. And it’s set, Wells Fargo has set aside another $4 billion for future liability. So this is not nothing.

SHAPIRO: But even if it does have to pay $4 billion in the future, as you say, that’s less than the bank makes in a single quarter. So is this really enough to force big changes?

ZARROLI: Well, that’s right. But keep in mind the fine isn’t the only thing that regulators are doing. The Federal Reserve has essentially told Wells Fargo earlier this year that they cannot grow any more until they’ve persuaded the government that they have reformed. There’s going to be a pretty heavy oversight role by regulators. Bloomberg had a really good article today that pointed out that the settlement that Wells Fargo has signed allows regulators to remove executives and board members if they see fit.

SHAPIRO: What kind of a message does a fine like this send to other big banks?

ZARROLI: Well, this was a really big and embarrassing scandal for Wells Fargo, and it really did suggest that, you know, at the very least, senior managers were sort of asleep at the switch. And Lawrence White of NYU says you really have to look at this in context.

WHITE: I think fundamentally it’s about very poor management on the part of Wells, and it really raises the question, are these big banks too big to manage effectively?

ZARROLI: And, White says, just look at some of the other big scandals that have happened at major banks, like the London Whale case. That was when a single trader at JPMorgan Chase’s London office caused $6 billion in derivatives losses. So you have these big, huge problems developing in parts of the bank, and senior managers can be unaware of them because they preside over these really huge operations, and that’s a problem.

SHAPIRO: NPR’s Jim Zarroli. Thank you.

ZARROLI: You’re welcome.

Copyright © 2018 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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Texas Disability Group Wants Victims' Voices Heard In Gun Debate

Susan Nelson, author and public speaker on brain injury awareness and gun safety, at her home in Austin, Texas. Nelson survived a point-blank gunshot to the head in 1993.

Gabriel C. Perez/KUT

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Gabriel C. Perez/KUT

A disability rights group in Texas sent out a survey last month, trying to figure out how many of its members became disabled by gun violence. The group, ADAPT of Texas, says it’s an effort to collect data that will help inform Texas lawmakers about how they should legislate guns.

Bob Kafka, an organizer with ADAPT, says when gun violence occurs, particularly mass shootings, the public tends to have a pretty limited discussion about what happens to the victims.

Susan Nelson was one of those victims. About 25 years ago, she was having dinner at a friend’s house. Her friend had a gun.

“It was registered and everything,” she says of her friend’s firearm.

There was also a young man there that night. He’d been thrown out of his parents’ house and was unstable. He found the gun and confronted both Nelson and her friend, saying he was going to rob and then kill them. Nelson says he first shot her in her left shoulder.

“I stood up to turn to run and was shot in the back of the head,” she says. “My friend was as well and that’s the last part I remember from the shooting. My friend died in flight to the hospital and I woke from a coma two weeks later.”

She was 29-years-old and had to start her life all over.

“I was paralyzed,” she says. “I could barely read and write. My vision was really bad so I had to spend the next seven months in therapy relearning everything and working really, really hard.”

Her hard work paid off. Nelson can walk now and she’s a writer. Her vision is good but she still lives with various disabilities.

“It takes me longer to formulate my sentences because my brain doesn’t work as fast to make the words come out of my mouth as fast as I’d like,” she says.

This experience hasn’t changed Nelson’s relationship with guns very much, though. Nelson grew up in southeast Texas surrounded by guns. She says she still thinks people who are responsible should be able to have them.

“I am not against guns. And I don’t know that everyone who gets shot is going to turn them against guns,” she says.

This way of thinking is something Kafka says he’s expecting to better understand as the ADAPT survey results come in. He wants the information to help educate lawmakers and bolster the group’s authority to testify on behalf of its members about gun legislation. Kafka says victims of gun violence all face different hurdles in recovery and he wants to know about those experiences. But he’s not expecting everyone surveyed to hold the same views.

“We have people on both sides of the issue,” he says. “There are probably NRA members in the disability community.”

Kafka says we should hear from people who were disabled by gun violence because we rarely do.

“Not only do we not talk about it, it’s invisible,” he says. “The media loves to focus on how many people died and then they have the sort of other injured, but I’ve never seen where they follow the rehab of somebody.”

Mass shootings also tend to garner a lot of media attention, says Noam Ostrander with the School of Social Work at DePaul University in Chicago. But there are many people who become disabled because of day-to-day gun violence in major cities who never get called by a reporter. For many years, Ostrander worked with gang members in the west side of Chicago who became paralyzed after being shot.

“The cost of that injury and that often then becomes a public cost is astronomical and I think that would be shocking to a lot of folks,” he says.

It’s also easy to forget, Ostrander says, that about three to five times the number of people who die from gun violence actually survive. And Kafka wants to make sure that their voices count in the debate.


This story is part of a reporting partnership with NPR, KUT andKaiser Health News. You can follow Ashley Lopez on Twitter: @AshLopezRadio.

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Today in Movie Culture: The Problem With Super Speed, Time Travel Done Right and More

Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:

Alternate Timeline Movie of the Day:

BossLogic continues to imagine an X-Men movie made in the 1990s with Sarah Michelle Gellar and Eliza Dushku as Phoenix and X-23, respectively:

Continued 90s #xmen – Phoenix – X23@SarahMGellar x @elizadushkupic.twitter.com/wlZQefwmNR

— BossLogic (@Bosslogic) April 19, 2018

Movie Science of the Day:

In the latest edition of Because Science, Kyle Hill scientifically explains why you wouldn’t want super speed like The Flash and Superman:

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Movie Comparison of the Day:

Speaking of movie science, Slate compares the time-travel of Back to the Future and The Terminator to show why only one of them gets it right:

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Reworked Trailer of the Day:

Darth Blender redid the new Incredibles 2 trailer as if it starred the characters from Family Guy:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Jayne Mansfield, who was born on this day in 1933, celebrates her 28th birthday with her children on the set of The George Raft Story in 1961:

Filmmaker in Focus:

This video by Sebastian Gonzalez looks at how Edgar Wright creates atmosphere through style:

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Video Essay of the Day:

Patrick H. Willems looks at the art of dropping the “F word” in a PG-13 movie in this NSFW video essay:

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Cosplay of the Day:

Rob Delaney’s Deadpool 2 character Peter is already hip enough that the cosplaying cat is cosplaying as him:

Hey @PeterW_1974… we don’t believe you when you say you don’t have any powers. How else could you have won our hearts so fast?

#Deadpool2pic.twitter.com/4bELHlHqIs

— Cat Cosplay (@Cat_Cosplay) April 19, 2018

Mashup of the Day:

Magneto knocks out Captain America, Spider-Man and Wonder Woman battle Wolverine and more showdowns can be seen in this Eclectic Method “Superhero Fightclub” video:

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Classic Movie Clip of the Day:

With Super Troopers 2 finally arriving in theaters this weekend, here is a clip of one of the most memorable moments from the 2001 original:

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and

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Recent Tariffs On Canadian Newsprint Are Hurting U.S. Papers, Could Trigger Job Cuts

Recent tariffs on Canadian newsprint are hurting U.S. newspapers, potentially triggering further job cuts and consolidation. The duties of up to 32 percent come after a complaint from a single U.S. supplier, and are opposed by the domestic paper industry trade group.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

The actual paper that newspapers are printed on just got much more expensive. The Commerce Department has imposed steep tariffs on newsprint imported from Canada. On one hand, that’s boosting profits for the five remaining newsprint mills in the U.S. On the other hand, it’s pummelling the newspaper industry, which was already hurting. Frank Morris of member station KCUR has the story.

FRANK MORRIS, BYLINE: If you want to know the latest about the local hospital funding crisis, city hall or high school sports in rural Marysville, Kan., the Advocate has you covered.

SARAH KESSINGER: And this is our old press room back here. The press used to be here.

MORRIS: These days, publisher Sarah Kessinger contracts out for printing to save money. Income is down. And newsprint, the paper’s second largest operating expense, that is way up.

KESSINGER: It’s tough. It’s getting tougher especially with these newsprint tariffs coming in to the picture.

MORRIS: Over the last few months, the U.S. Commerce Department has slapped tariffs of up to 32 percent on Canadian newsprint, raising prices nationwide.

KESSINGER: If that trend continues, it will really make our profits disappear.

MORRIS: And it’s not just small papers. The Tampa Bay Times, for instance, is laying off around 50 people – responding to price hikes it claims will drive up its newsprint bill by $3 million a year. Al Cross, who heads the Institute for Rural Journalism at University of Kentucky, blames a single manufacturer.

AL CROSS: We have a complaint brought by one paper mill. It’s just crazy. The industry is being turned on its head by the manipulation of trade laws.

MORRIS: That one mill is NORPAC in Longview, Wash. And Craig Anneberg is the CEO.

CRAIG ANNEBERG: We strongly disagree with the notion that the industry requires low-priced, subsidized newsprint from Canada to sustain their business model.

MORRIS: Anneberg says canadian newsprint mills benefit from cheap hydroelectric power and state-owned forests. He claims that some sell below cost in the U.S. – taking over most of the market, depressing prices and forcing layoffs at his mill.

ANNEBERG: We have some of the largest, fastest, most technologically advanced paper machines in the world. And if we couldn’t compete – if we were having to shut down one of our machines, it looked like something wasn’t right.

MORRIS: The newsprint business has been rough. Mark Pitts with the American Forest and Paper Association says U.S. demand has cratered – falling about 80 percent in the past two decades, shuttering newsprint mills on both sides of the border.

MARK PITTS: I think it’s pretty clear that the predominant challenge out there isn’t about imports. It’s really about the declining demand.

MORRIS: Because more and more people read news on screens, not paper – and Pitts says the tariffs driving up newsprint prices will just accelerate that trend. Avis Little Eagle in the Standing Rock Indian Reservation agrees. She says tariffs are killing her paper, the Teton Times.

AVIS LITTLE EAGLE: It’s like a stranglehold. I just feel like you’re getting the life choked out of you. And it’s like little by little, more and more, the life of the newspaper is leaving.

MORRIS: Little Eagle says most of her customers don’t have internet access, so her printed paper is the only way they know what’s going on with local government. But two weeks ago, she reached an impasse.

LITTLE EAGLE: I was like, oh, my God, I can’t even print the paper this week. And so that’s pretty darn close.

MORRIS: The Commerce Department will decide whether to finalize or lift the tariffs on Canadian newsprint by late summer. Meantime, high newsprint prices will keep cutting into newspaper profits and undermining demand for the paper in newspaper. For NPR News, I’m Frank Morris.

(SOUNDBITE OF STEVE REICH’S “ELECTRIC COUNTERPOINT-FAST (MOVEMENT 3)”)

Copyright © 2018 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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Lance Armstrong To Pay U.S. Government $5 Million To Settle Fraud Claims

Lance Armstrong attends a 2017 NBA game in Atlanta.

Brett Davis/AP

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Brett Davis/AP

Lance Armstrong has agreed to pay the federal government $5 million to settle fraud allegations that could have resulted in a nearly $100 million penalty. The U.S. Postal Service, which had sponsored the disgraced cyclist’s team, argued that Armstrong defrauded taxpayers by accepting millions from the government agency while using performance-enhancing drugs during competition.

“A competitor who intentionally uses illegal PEDs not only deceives fellow competitors and fans, but also sponsors, who help make sporting competitions possible,” Chad Reader, acting attorney general for the Justice Department’s civil division, said in a statement. “This settlement demonstrates that those who cheat the government will be held accountable.”

Armstrong, for his part, cast the agreement as a win, as well.

“I am glad to resolve this case and move forward with my life,” the 46-year-old former professional cyclist said in a statement released to NPR by his attorneys Thursday.

“I’m looking forward to devoting myself to the many great things in my life – my five kids, my wife, my podcast, several exciting writing and film projects, my work as a cancer survivor, and my passion for sports and competition,” he added. “There is a lot to look forward to.”

During his time cycling, Armstrong famously won a record seven consecutive Tour de France titles after recovering from testicular cancer, six of which he won as a member of the USPS-sponsored team.

But he was dogged by suspicions of doping throughout his career — including from his former teammate, Floyd Landis, who sued him in 2010 under the False Claims Act. As Reuters explains, the federal law “lets whistle-blowers pursue fraud cases on behalf of the government, and obtain rewards if successful.”

By 2012, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency found that Armstrong’s team “ran the most sophisticated, professionalized and successful doping program that sport has ever seen” — but it was not until 2013 that he publicly admitted to cheating in a highly publicized interview with Oprah Winfrey. Ultimately, Armstrong was stripped of his Tour de France wins and banned for life from competition.

Not long after the Oprah interview, federal prosecutors joined Landis’ suit on behalf of the USPS. The plaintiffs accused Armstrong of financially benefiting from his repeated false statements and, in turn, harming the government agency that spent tens of millions sponsoring his team.

With Thursday’s settlement, however, the trial scheduled for May 7 ends before it could even get underway.

“The Postal Service has strongly supported the Department of Justice’s intervention and pursuit of this case, as it always has been our position that Lance Armstrong misled the Postal Service,” Thomas J. Marshall, USPS general counsel, said in a statement Thursday.

“This matter has now been resolved in a manner that imposes consequences for that wrongful action,” he added. “With this case, as in all other instances, the Postal Service vigorously defends our brand and our position as a trusted government institution.”

Landis, who has previously admitted to doping himself, will receive about $1.1 million as part of the settlement.

“I am particularly glad to have made peace with the Postal Service,” Armstrong said Thursday, noting that he has tried “to take full responsibility for my mistakes, and make amends wherever possible.”

“I rode my heart out for the Postal cycling team, and was always especially proud to wear the red, white and blue eagle on my chest when competing in the Tour de France,” he added. “Those memories are very real and mean a lot to me.”

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