1. Silver-screen strategy nets New York robbers $217,000


    They targeted dozens of corner stores, discount stores and pizzerias, netting $217,000 in the past year, police said.”(The suspects) told detectives that they were inspired by the Ben Affleck movie ‘The Town’ in which the protagonists used bleach to cover their tracks,” police said in a statement.These suspects also would cut electrical power to the robbery locations and use miners’ headlamps to work in the dark, the police said.Four men have been charged in connection to 62 robberies, and two were scheduled to appear in Brooklyn criminal court.

     
  2. Arise Technologies to pay Scheuten Solar about $1.3 million


    The arbitration was related to a dispute between the two companies over the lease of a photovoltaic cell manufacturing plant in Germany. Arise had signed the lease for the plant in 2009 and converted it into a technology center to commercialize PV cell technology.The company had cash and cash equivalents of about C$300,000 as of June 30, according to Thomson Reuters data.Arise, which said it was disappointed with the arbitration decision, is still working with its financial adviser, Canaccord Genuity, to evaluate strategic alternatives.($1 = 0.721 Euros)

     
  3. Do hospitals do enough to help smokers quit?


    But that finding belies what researchers consider a failed attempt, initiated nine years ago, at getting hospitals to actually help people stop smoking. The next version of the program needs to do better, experts say.”There was no requirement, other than a box to check off that any substantive counseling was given to help smokers to quit,” Dr. Michael Fiore, director of the Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention at the University of Wisconsin, told Reuters Health. He was not involved in the current study but chairs a panel working to revise the hospital rules on smokers.In 2002, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and The Joint Commission, which sets hospital standards, required that smokers discharged after having pneumonia, heart attack or heart failure be given quitting advice.It was almost too simple a request, said Douglas Levy, lead author of the new study and a professor at Harvard Medical School and the Mongan Institute for Health Policy at Massachusetts General Hospital.”There are anecdotal reports of hospitals putting a postcard in the patient’s room saying, ‘you should quit smoking’ and checking off the box that they’ve provided smoking cessation advice or counseling,” Levy told Reuters Health.Levy and his colleagues collected information from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on how often hospitals provided quitting advice to patients.Their study, published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, shows how readily hospitals adopted the new measure.In 2002, just 67 percent of smokers hospitalized because of a heart attack received advice on quitting smoking.By 2008, that number jumped to 99 percent of heart attack patients.For heart failure patients, 42 percent admitted to the hospital in 2002 received smoking cessation information, compared to 97 percent of patients in 2008.Similarly for pneumonia patients, 37 percent of them were advised to quit smoking in 2002, compared to 95 percent in 2008.The numbers show that hospitals paid attention to the rules, but the rules were too easy to satisfy, Levy said.The Joint Commission recognized that the requirements were not strict enough, and they put together an advisory panel in 2009 to revise the rules. One of the study’s authors sits on the panel.Fiore, the panel’s chairman, said one of the changes coming out in 2012 is that hospitals will have to follow up with people 30 days after they are discharged to check whether the patients were able to quit smoking.In this way, hospitals can better gauge how well their efforts are paying off.Levy’s results don’t show whether the higher rates of quitting advice resulted in more people quitting smoking.Take-home advice from hospitals doesn’t always change outcomes. Another recent study showed that hospitals that set up children and their families with a plan for managing asthma did not reduce later hospital visits for the condition (see Reuters Health story of October 4, 2011).Fiore said he expects the new rules to be more effective at helping hospitals seize the opportunity to get smokers to quit.Hospitals will also be required to document their efforts in more detail.But Levy said some of his results left him concerned that certain hospitals may struggle under the stricter requirements.The small numbers of patients who did not receive any advice on how to quit smoking were clustered at hospitals that serve a greater proportion of poor, minority or frail patients.If these hospitals are not meeting the standards “when the bar is set low, it’s going to be harder for them when the bar is set higher,” Levy said.He added that it will be important to make sure the most vulnerable hospitals don’t fall behind.

     
  4. Glencore unit in court over corruption case


    The case, which also involves other companies including Dutch grains firm Codrico, is the culmination of a probe that has been running for more than seven years, involving a former EU agriculture official who is accused of giving out market-sensitive information on prices and quotas.Former EU agriculture department official Karel Brus is accused of passing confidential information relating to EU export subsidy application decisions to a French farming lobbyist between 1999 and 2003.A police source said on Wednesday that a 12,000 euro ($16,400) luxury Christofle cutlery set was among the gifts given by one of Glencore’s co-defendants to an EU official. The source said he also received holidays and other offerings.Glencore, the world’s largest diversified commodities trader, said ahead of its listing earlier this year that its subsidiary Glencore Grain Rotterdam, a former employee and a current employee had been charged in the case.It said the investigation was probing a public official, the European Commission’s Directorate General for Agriculture and others for “violation of professional secrecy, corruption of an international civil servant and criminal conspiracy”.The case involves a total of 17 defendants who are alleged to be involved in the conspiracy in some way, including Union Invivo, a French agricultural cooperative.There will be four hearings per week after the case starts in earnest in March or April next year, officials said.Officials hope to conclude the case by the end of June, but there is a preliminary hearing pencilled in for the middle of January to finalise some of the details.The investigation started in 2004 following a complaint by the European Anti-Fraud Office, the police source said. It covers facts dating from 1999 to 2003.Glencore declined to comment. Invivo and lawyers for Codrico were not immediately reachable for comment.

     
  5. European banks will struggle to tap unsecured funds-Irish official


    He also said he expected Allied Irish Banks to submit a salary proposal for a new chief executive to the department this week.AIB, effectively nationalised late last year, wants to break a government-imposed salary ceiling of 500,000 euros ($682,000) in order to attract a new CEO.

     
  6. Warren draws $3 million in first weeks of Senate bid


    The fundraising haul, which only covers a portion of the third quarter, is a strong start for Warren, who would face Republican Scott Brown in November 2012 if she wins the Democratic primary in September.Brown’s campaign said it raised $1.55 million in the third quarter, bringing its stash on hand to $10.5 million.The moderate Republican won a special election in January 2010 to fill the remainder of the late Senator Edward Kennedy’s term. Kennedy died of a brain tumor in August 2009.Republicans are eager to hold Brown’s seat, and Democrats see it as perhaps their best chance to pick up a seat in 2012.The only other Democratic candidate in the primary to announce fundraising totals so far, community organizer Alan Khazei, on Friday reported $365,000 in the third-quarter fundraising and had $750,000 available.Warren, a Harvard University law professor, announced her Senate run on September 14, but started raising money in August, when she formed an exploratory committee.Progressive groups, including MoveOn.org, have thrown fund-raising muscle behind Warren, a consumer advocate and Wall Street critic.Warren created the Obama administration’s Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and led a panel created by Congress to examine how bank bailout money was being spent.