Categories
Politics

Secret Service returns fraudulent pandemic loans to federal SBA

The US Secret Service returned $286 million in fraudulently obtained pandemic aid loans to the Small Business Administration, the agency announced Friday.

The funds sent back to the SBA were obtained via the Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) program using both fabricated information and stolen identities.

The suspects used Green Dot Bank, a fintech institution, to hold and move the fraudulent funds. More than 15,000 accounts were used in the conspiracy, by individuals in the US as well as domestic and transnational organized crime rings, the agency said.

Investigations are ongoing and further information about suspects was not immediately released. the Investigation was initiated by the Secret Service field office in Orlando, Florida, and Green Dot bank worked with the agency to identify the fraudulent accounts.

“Fraudsters in general are always looking for ways and techniques to better do their crimes and modern conveniences are just one of those things they use. So currently, cryptocurrency is a big thing, fintechs, third-party payment systems. But there’s not an institution , even our traditional financial institutions, that weren’t targeted during the pandemic,” Roy Dotson, lead investigator for the Secret Service, told CNBC in an interview.

Initial investigations indicated the majority of the fraudulent accounts at Green Dot were established with synthetic and stolen identities, and involved using “willing and unwilling money mules,” Dotson said.

The Secret Service and SBA Office of Inspector General put out advisories to 30,000 financial institutions in early 2020 to lay out fraud indicators and guide the banks to partner with federal agencies to recover fraudulent funds, Dotson said. He added these investigations will likely last years due to their size and scope.

OIG Inspector General Hannibal Ware said the partnership with the Secret Service has to date resulted in more than 400 indictments and nearly 300 convictions related to pandemic fraud.

The US government allocated more than $1 trillion to Main Street under both the Paycheck Protection Program and EIDL program. The PPP allowed small businesses to borrow loans that may be forgiven if the borrower used the majority of the capital on payroll, while the Covid-19 EIDL program allowed borrowers to access loans based on temporary losses of revenue due to the pandemic. An advance grant was also available under the EIDL.

Reviews of the two programs by the SBA’s Office of Inspector General warned that criminals would potentially exploit the system due to the fast-moving nature of the rollout and demand for aid. CNBC investigations revealed, in some cases, how easy it was for criminals to obtain fraudulent aid via stolen identities.

The SBA OIG said it has identified $87 billion of potentially fraudulent EIDL loans.

Over the past two years, the Secret Service said it has seized over $1.4 billion in fraudulently obtained funds and assisted in returning some $2.3 billion to state unemployment insurance programs. Nearly 4,000 pandemic-related fraud investigations and inquiries have been initiated by the Secret Service. More than 150 field offices and 40 cyber task forces are involved.

“This is not going to be a quick fix. As we talked about today, 15,325 accounts at one financial institution — this is one case, so you can just think of the potential number of suspects and how many investigations that could come out of those . And with all of our federal, state and local partners working this and having the same mission. It’s going to be a long process,” Dotson said at a news conference announcing the returned funds.

Categories
Entertainment

‘The Nutcracker’ Returns, With New Guidelines for Kids

“Our ultimate goal is of course to try that everyone – both the students on stage and the audience in the theater – can see not just our ‘Nutcracker’ production, but everything we do this year”, said Jeffrey J. Bentley, the executive director of the ballet.

In Kansas City, “Nutcracker” is a tradition that goes back more than three decades, although it was canceled last year along with productions across the country. Parents with young children said they were disappointed not to be able to attend again this year.

Adam Travis, an accountant in Kansas City, was hoping to take his two daughters, 9 and 4 years old, who are taking ballet lessons, to the show. The production has a family tradition: You dress up, go out to dinner and sit in the same seats every year.

“It was a disappointment,” said Travis. “We’re just beginning to get back to normal.”

In New York and other major cities where auditioning for the Nutcracker is highly competitive, kids under 12 are likely to be disappointed to miss another opportunity to appear on the show. Many spend years waiting for a chance to perform in it, and it is a rite of passage for aspiring dancers. Instead, the focus this year is on young dancers, who are often overshadowed by their younger, more squirrel-like colleagues in production.

“There are parents who have an 8 year old, a 9 year old, a 10 year old who know this is the window for their child to be in The Nutcracker,” said Stafford of the City Ballet . “It’s going to be tough and they have to work it through with their children, who will also be disappointed that they won’t get a chance this year.”

Despite the added vigilance, many dancers said they were excited to get back on stage.

Categories
Entertainment

Assessment: ‘The Threepenny Opera’ Returns House, Liberated

BERLIN — “I’m not asking for an opera here,” the notorious criminal Macheath says at his wedding, early in a work that happens to be called “Die Dreigroschenoper” (“The Threepenny Opera”).

And in Barrie Kosky’s hauntingly enjoyable new production of Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht’s famous “play with music” for the Berliner Ensemble — at the theater where it premiered in 1928 — Macheath then reaches into the orchestra pit in search of nuptial entertainment and steals the “Threepenny” score from the conductor’s stand. He flips through the pages while humming the show’s big hit, “Mack the Knife,” tears them up and throws the scraps into a metal bucket. Then he lights them on fire.

The line “I’m not asking for an opera here” dates back to the ’20s, but Weill and Brecht never wrote what follows — nor did their essential collaborator Elisabeth Hauptmann, who with this production is finally getting proper billing alongside them after decades of neglect. Yet this kind of ironic gesture toward the art form wouldn’t be out of character for them; coming from Kosky, it’s a subtle tribute, and a blazing declaration of independence.

It’s a moment, along with many others in Kosky’s production that epitomizes the adage of knowing rules in order to break them.

Kosky clearly understands the work: the social critiques that course through Brecht and Hauptmann’s crass text; the ways in which Weill’s earworm score lodges those ideas in your mind; and how, in its tension between words and music, “Threepenny” dares you to connect with it emotionally amid constant reminders of theatrical artifice.

He also seems to know that “Threepenny” is ultimately a problem piece. It may be the defining artwork of Weimar-era Berlin, but more often than not it makes for a joyless night at the theater. Its dizzying layers of satire and style tend to overwhelm directors, who as if operating with a Wikipedia understanding easily succumb to visual clichés, vicious affect and didacticism. The worst productions aspire to the sexily somber Berlin of Sam Mendes’s take on the musical “Cabaret.”

But “Threepenny” isn’t, as Kosky said in an interview with The New York Times, “‘Cabaret’ with a little bit of intellectualism.” Indeed, it was quintessentially 1920s Berlin — a timely tale, despite its setting of London’s criminal underworld in the 19th century, that became a pop culture phenomenon known as “Threepenny fever” — but its legacy is far richer and more widespread than that. Especially after the 1950s, once the show found belated success in the United States with a long-running adaptation by the composer Marc Blitzstein.

Covers of “Mack the Knife” abounded, and made for one of Ella Fitzgerald’s greatest live recordings; Brecht’s poetic lyrics influenced Bob Dylan; the artist Nan Goldin named her photography collection “The Ballad of Sexual Dependency” after one of the show’s songs. And the metatheatrical devices of “Threepenny” are alive and well: In Leos Carax’s new film, “Annette,” emotion and artifice fit snugly together in a deliberate tension you could trace back to Brecht and Weill.

Even so, the vitality of “Threepenny” depends on intervention and adaptation; it can never be performed, as it too often has been, as a museum piece. And Kosky never treats it as one. Instead he adds and subtracts, breathing new life into a work that desperately needed it. He sheds the excesses of Act I and eliminates entire characters, for example, to reveal a recognizable but freshly presented story focused on that most fundamental of human dramas: love.

Capitalism, and Brecht’s scathing indictment of it, still loom over the show — but more obliquely, as an insidious force behind relationships that renders them slippery and unreliable. In Kosky’s view, it also feeds and thwarts Macheath’s pathological need to be loved, whether by his fellow characters or the members of the audience.

Macheath, a.k.a. Mack the Knife — performed by Nico Holonics with unflappable joy but a weariness that betrays the darkness behind his carefree demeanor — is not a man to give up his habits, as he is described in the show. He gives away wedding rings as if they were pennies, and smiles as he watches women fight over him. Like Don Giovanni, he never loses faith in his ability to manipulate them, even as they abandon him one by one.

He is introduced, as ever, with “Mack the Knife” (following the overture, here lithe yet lyrical in chorale-like passages, conducted by Adam Benzwi). Through a curtain of black tinsel, a sparkling face appears — that of Josefin Platt as the Moon Over Soho, a role created for Kosky’s production — to sing the murder ballad with the rapid vibrato of Lotte Lenya, Weill’s wife and a legendary interpreter of his music.

In general, Kosky seems to have more of an affinity for Weill’s music, which he expands with relish, than the text. Where he truly defers to Brecht — his production, after all, is for Brecht’s company — is in the staging, which shatters the fourth wall from the start and continually reminds its audience, in anti-Wagnerian fashion, that what they are seeing isn’t real.

Polly Peachum, here a commanding Cynthia Micas, calls for her own spotlight and gestures for the curtain to be raised, revealing a jungle gym of a set (by Rebecca Ringst) that is more dynamic than it at first appears; Jonathan Jeremiah Peachum (the darkly charming Tilo Nest), Polly’s father and Macheath’s underworld rival, cues the orchestra; stagehands make no effort to hide their work.

The effect, in Brecht’s school of theater, is to temper the audience’s emotional response and trigger an intellectual one — which is crucial to the political success of “Threepenny,” yet is often difficult to reconcile with the seductive grip of Weill’s music. That can get messy, but Kosky’s production comfortably has it both ways; the result may not please purists of Brecht or Weill, but on balance it makes for persuasive, satisfying drama.

And by homing in on Macheath, Kosky allows room for psychological richness, particularly with the women in his orbit: Polly; her mother, Celia Peachum (lent the authority of a power broker by Constanze Becker); Jenny (arguably the soul of the show, wistful and bitter as sung by Bettina Hoppe); and Lucy Brown (Laura Balzer, a master of physical and musical comedy). You could also count among them Lucy’s father, the police chief Tiger Brown, here performed by Kathrin Wehlisch in drag — not a gimmick, but a homoerotic treatment of Macheath’s oldest friendship as yet another fragile romance.

All these relationships fail — usually because of money, in some way. But Macheath is undeterred, by the end looking for his next connection as a brightly lit sign descends from the rafters: “LOVE ME.” That’s another Brechtian touch, a modern take on the projections used in Caspar Neher’s set for the original 1928 production.

But what follows is all Kosky. After the winkingly jubilant finale, the Moon Over Soho shows its face again, bleakly sending off the audience with a “Mack the Knife” verse, written by Brecht in 1930, that says some people are in the dark, and some are in the light; and while you can see those in the light, you’ll never see the ones in the dark.

Die Dreigroschenoper

Through Sept. 4, then in repertory, at the Berliner Ensemble, Berlin; berliner-ensemble.de.

Categories
Entertainment

The Joyce Returns, With a Sometimes Eclectic Dance Menu

This fall, the Joyce Theater will present its first live dance season since it was forced off in March 2020. The season, announced on Tuesday, runs from September to February and includes 18 ensembles, including some such as the British hip-hop ensemble Far From the Norm, which is performing in the theater for the first time.

“We had a few priorities of rebooking and canceling shows the companies that were scheduled to perform here last year,” said Joyce CEO Linda Shelton, “as well as reaffirming our mission to promote diversity.”

Another consideration, given numerous travel bans and the difficulty of obtaining visas for performers amid changing waves of Covid, was “who can actually reach us when all these borders open and close,” added Ms. Shelton. As a result, only four companies arrive from abroad, Far From the Norm; Malpaso from Cuba, whose show was canceled last year; LEV from Israel; and the Colombian ensemble Sankofa Danzafro, whose piece “Accommodating Lie” deals with stereotypes of Afro-Latin culture.

The season kicks off on September 22nd with a visit to the prestigious Minneapolis-based Ragamala Dance Company, which performs the evening-length work “Fires of Varanasi: Dance of the Eternal Pilgrim”. The piece uses the classical Indian dance style Bharatanatyam to explore themes of life and death through the lens of Hindu rituals.

Choreographer Caleb Teicher, who was scheduled to perform last year, presents the delayed debut of their Lindy Hop and Swing program, created in collaboration with a team of dancers and choreographers including LaTasha Barnes from “Jazz Continuum” and the Ballroom and Lindy Hop specialist Evita Arce. This show, titled “Swing Out” (October 5-17), will be accompanied on stage by a live swing ensemble, the Eyal Vilner Big Band.

Other highlights include Lucinda Childs’ 1979 minimalist juggernaut, “Dance,” set for Philip Glass (October 19-24); and Ayodele Casel’s cheerful tap and live jazz evening “Chasing Magic”, which had its virtual premiere in April of this year, will be premiered live from January 4th to 9th.

Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo, the cross-dressing ballet troupe, will hold their usual holiday run (December 14th to January 2nd). Among various sharp-eyed parodies of famous ballets – and the ballet itself – there will be a new work, “Nightcrawlers”, based on Jerome Robbins’ portrait of three couples dancing to Chopin Nocturnes, “In the Night”.

The theater will decide at a later date whether to require actors, staff and viewers to be vaccinated.

Tickets for the fall-winter season will go on sale on August 9th.

Categories
Entertainment

As Bang on a Can Returns, a New Era Rises

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. – Venturing back to live performances and finding a classical music institution in rude health can be like putting on old jeans and discovering a light fit with relief.

This is what it felt like to attend the Bang on a Can’s LOUD Weekend festival, held here on Friday and Saturday throughout the Mass MoCA complex.

With over 20 hours of performance, one could see one familiar look after another – all trademarks of the legendary, free Bang on a Can Marathons in New York City. But here, in a two-day environment with paid tickets, there was more time for each musician’s set to take on an individual character. And although some artists got nervous on the first day, most of the appearances unfolded with a crisp, defiant touch – as if they hadn’t spent time without the audience.

This was especially true for the pianist Lisa Moore’s show on Friday with pieces by Philip Glass, Don Byron, Martin Bresnick – and a world premiere by Frederic Rzewski, who died in June. The set confirmed the interpretative knowledge that she brought to her recordings with works by these composers. And the Rzewski premiere – “Amoramaro”, with the subtitle “Love Has No Laws” – was bittersweet: an alternately seductive and prickly memory of all his music that can no longer be written.

“Amoramaro,” commissioned by her husband for Moore, is nonetheless something to be cherished (and certainly included). Its occasionally lush chords – half remembered and half transformed from the American Songbook – mingle with austere, rocky runs that create trapezoidal vibrations between distant registers. And its climatic, pounding clusters may have been inspired by Rzewski’s experience with Stockhausen’s “piano pieces”. The fact that everything stuck together for over 15 minutes was proof of both Rzewski’s peculiar and personal palette and Moore’s fine instinct for it.

Elsewhere the festival gave names in bold: It is significant that the audience this weekend asked each other: “Which Kronos Quartet concert was better?” For me it was on Friday evening, a dark but intense set that included Jlin’s “Little Black Book” began and ended with Jacob Garchik’s “Storyteller”. This performance was coherent than the one that followed on Saturday, which was well played but more diffuse, including the premiere of Terry Riley’s “This Assortment of Atoms – One Time Only!” – an attractive but modest addition to the composer’s significant work for Kronos.

As with the previous Bang on a Can Marathons, contemporary and modernist trends from all over the world were also present and taken into account at the LOUD Weekend. These included French spectralism (in the music of Gérard Grisey); Minimalism (Riley, Glass, and their descendants); and collective improvisation (by Banda de los Muertos, a jazz ensemble inspired by the music of Sinaloa, Mexico).

And there were solo acts throughout. The violinist, improviser and composer Mazz Swift brought the Saturday evening to an early climax with a presentation of her “Sankofa project”, which she described as “new interpretations of so-called slave songs as well as freedom songs and my own versions” of what I call modern protest songs. ” When Swift used subtle electronic processing to boost a few notes of the chest voice – or when she looped a striped violin passage to create a hazy cloud that supported Spitfire solo lines – her range of effects proved as protean as they were powerful.

In addition to the starry headliners, there were also students from the summer institute Bang on a Can, who were given moments to shine. Some of them seemed ready to build their own ensembles and maybe return for future festivals. The saxophonist Julian Velasco shone on Friday in a mixed professional and student ensemble in Julius Eastman’s “Femenine” and on Saturday in a duo with Shelley Washington’s “BIG Talk”.

Ken Thomson, Velasco’s seasoned pro from a partner in Washington, was practically omnipresent on both days, including as a member of the organization’s house group, the Bang on a Can All-Stars.

Thomson and his all-star colleagues made the most of their nickname on Friday with a rousing version of “Workers Union” – a minimalist-influenced classic by Louis Andriessen, who died in July. And while the band’s keystone set on Saturday evening – which also served as the finale of the festival – was played crisply and energetically, the program was mixed.

At this concert, a new arrangement of Terry Riley’s “Autodreamographical Tales” (soon to be on an All-Stars recording) was released, a work that seems to be considered a curiosity in the legendary composer’s oeuvre. Or a curiosity on a curiosity, because that version has its roots in an obscure piece that Riley recorded in the 1990s.

The text comes from a dream journal that Riley kept for a while. There are moments of reserved humor, and the “tales” impale the musical ego in a winning way; we get a feeling for how often in Riley’s dreams other musicians complement his work. But the piece also wanders and is not always as clever as the subconscious would have hoped – as telling dreams tend to be.

“Tales” still offers stray joys, especially when Riley comes up with a vampy blues or rock number – here happily arranged by his son Gyan Riley. Guitarist Mark Stewart took on vocal duties as Riley has been in Japan since the beginning of the pandemic. (He made a brief appearance in the form of a live, light-hearted video introduction.)

In the last hours of the line-up on Saturday, listeners were able to move from a short set by rising star Nathalie Joachim (sings and plays the flute on excerpts from her acclaimed album “Fanm d’Ayiti”) to a concert of Pandemic Solos, that of Bang. was commissioned to sprint on a can for his virtual marathons during the pandemic.

I couldn’t stand hearing these live streamed marathons right now. I tried, but the cluttered audio – inevitable with artists streaming from so many places – was recorded as microtragedies that distracted from the works themselves. I told myself I would hear some of these in the future; and i have on saturday.

A series of works for all-star bassist Robert Black opened the day, including Maria Huld Markan Sigfusdottir’s haunted, creepy “pending”. And after Joachim’s set, I heard a trio of burning and distinctive pieces by Aeryn Santillan, Rudresh Mahanthappa and Anna Clyne, all written for Thomson.

This is a secret strength of Bang on a Can. It attracts audiences with big names. But when the Legends disappoint in any given hour, as Riley did, there’s always the next set – and the next generation – to save the day.

Categories
Politics

Trump tax returns have to be launched by IRS to Congress, DOJ says

US President Donald Trump leaves Air Force One upon arrival at McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas on September 20, 2018. – Trump travels to Las Vegas for a campaign rally.

Almond Ngan | AFP | Getty Images

Former President Donald Trump’s income tax returns must be submitted to Congress by the IRS, the Justice Department said on Friday.

The DOJ’s Office of Legal Counsel said the Democrat-led House Ways and Means Committee had filed a request with a legitimate legislative purpose to inspect Trump’s tax returns, with the stated aim of assessing how the IRS judges the presidents’ tax returns checks.

This 39-page statement is a reverse of a statement by the same bureau during the Trump administration that supported the IRS’s refusal to submit Trump’s Returns to the Committee.

Under federal law, the tax-related committees of Congress have a “broad right” to obtain taxpayer information from the Treasury Department, the parent company of the IRS, the new statement said.

“The statute at issue here is clear: ‘Upon written request’ from the chairman of one of the three tax committees of Congress, the secretary ‘sends’ the tax information requested to the committee,'” said Friday’s statement.

While these committees cannot force government executives to compel disclosure of this information, the opinion states that the committees should be denied tax returns “only in exceptional circumstances” and when the request “lacks a legitimate legislative purpose”.

The ruling comes more than a year after the US Supreme Court ruled that Trump’s tax returns and other financial records had to be turned over to Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. by his longtime accountants following a criminal investigation subpoena.

The Trump Organization and its longtime CFO Allen Weisselberg were charged by Vance on July 1 with crimes related to an alleged plan since 2005 to avoid paying taxes on the remuneration of the CFO and other top executives.

Trump broke decades of precedents as a presidential candidate and White House resident by refusing to voluntarily release his income tax returns.

He had claimed that his returns were being examined by the IRS to justify not disclosing the returns.

However, there is no ban on taxpayers from making their tax returns publicly available, even if those tax returns are audited.

The Justice Department opinion, coming under an Attorney General Merrick Garland selected by President Joe Biden, is likely to anger Trump.

A Trump spokeswoman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal, D-Massachusetts, said in a statement, “As I have maintained for years, the committee’s case is very strong and the law is on our side.”

“I’m glad the Justice Department approves and we can move forward,” said Neal.

Neal’s committee sued the Treasury Department and the IRS in July 2019 for obtaining Trump’s tax returns after then Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and the head of the tax office defied subpoenas demanding Trump’s persona and business returns for six years. Mnuchin argued at the time that the committee had no legitimate legislative purpose in finding the documents.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-California, said in a statement: “Today the Biden administration won a rule of law victory as it respected the public interest by responding to Chairman Neal’s request for Donald’s tax returns Trump follows. “

“As speaker, on behalf of the House of Representatives, I applaud Chairman Neal for his dignified pursuit of the truth and the Justice Department of the Biden Administration for its respect for the law,” said Pelosi.

“Access to former President Trump’s tax returns is a national security issue,” she said. “The American people deserve to know the facts of their troubling conflicts of interest and the undermining of our security and democracy as President.”

Categories
Health

How Emergent BioSolutions Earned Earnings However Delivered Disappointing Vaccine Returns

After placing the no-bid contract with Emergent, the Trump administration reverted to traditional contract rules and looked for competitive proposals for additional fillings and packaging, known in the industry as fill-finish work, the documents show. Ology Bioservices, based in Alachua, Fla., Agreed to provide essentially the same services as the Camden and Rockville Emergent plants for three quarters to nearly one third the cost, according to a contract-based calculation.

According to an agreement made in August, Ology would collect state fees of $ 6.83 per vial. By comparison, Emergent’s existing lines would cost between $ 9.03 and $ 18.40 per vial.

A health department spokeswoman said Ology is cheaper in part because it can fill more than 100,000 vials in a single batch, which is five times that of Emergent. This “lowers the price per bottle by spreading the fixed costs over more bottles,” she said in an email.

Even after the launch of Ology, the government continued its higher-cost agreement with Emergent to ensure “additional capacity is available when or when it is needed to fill vaccines or therapeutics,” she said. At the time of the deal, former and current federal officials said the government wanted to secure as much manufacturing capacity as possible before commercial companies buy it out.

Over the years, Emergent has grown by funding the expansion of its manufacturing facilities and the accumulation of product reserves.

In November 2019, the company announced that it would double its sales, including by expanding its contract manufacturing business. A senior vice president, Syed Husain, outlined a “game plan” that would “cross-sell additional services” to existing customers, including the federal government. Six months later, Emergent signed the contract that expanded its existing government contract to include work in its Camden and Rockville locations.

Dr. Robert Kadlec, a former Trump administration official who oversaw the agency that awarded Covid-19 contracts, had previously worked as a consultant for Emergent. Dr. Kadlec has said that he did not negotiate the emergent deal but approved it. Emergent said it negotiated the agreement with professional government officials.

Categories
Politics

Secret Service seizes $2 billion in fraudulent unemployment funds, returns funds to states

Checks are printed at the US Treasury Department Philadelphia Finance Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Dennis Brack | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The Secret Service has seized stolen Covid unemployment benefit funds and returned them to states, agency officials said on Wednesday.

Programs in at least 30 states received the money after the agency found recipients fraudulently applied for pandemic unemployment.

“This is typical of the cyber fraud that we deal with annually. It is only put together on the basis of additional funds (from) the Covid aid,” said Roy Dotson, the Secret Service’s special envoy in charge, to CNBC. “The criminals took full advantage of the programs to try to steal from them.”

He said the $ 2 billion returned to states is a “conservative estimate” and the investigation into pandemic-related fraud is ongoing. He said last year that the Secret Service had sent advice to financial institutions to flag potentially fraudulent accounts that the money might have been deposited into.

According to Dotson, scammers have typically stolen the identities of people who are eligible for unemployment benefits. In other cases, he said, identities were stolen from people who had not even applied for unemployment.

CNBC policy

Read more about CNBC’s political coverage:

The rapid roll-out of the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program made it easy for scammers to become victims. The Inspectorate General of the Department of Labor said in a report released in March that at least $ 89 billion of the estimated $ 896 billion in Unemployment Program funds “could not be properly paid, a significant portion of which was due to fraud.”

The Ministry of Labor has announced that it will work with the secret service, the Justice Ministry and other agencies “to vigorously pursue those who defraud the unemployment insurance program and secure benefits for the unemployed.”

The Secret Service also announced that it had seized more than $ 640 million in funds defrauded primarily from the Paycheck Protection Program and the Economic Injury Disaster Loan Program. Around 690 inquiries into unemployment insurance and 720 inquiries into these two programs were initiated.

CNBC previously announced that millions of COVID-19 funds have been laundered through online investment platforms.

NBC News reported in February that most of the 50 state employment agencies were unaware of the full extent of their losses.

“I can imagine this will take a year or two,” said Dotson.

Categories
Entertainment

Maskless and Sweaty: Clubbing Returns to Britain for a Weekend

On April 29, French President Emmanuel Macron said he hoped to lift most of the country’s restrictions on June 30, but nightclubs would remain closed.

Many DJs wanted the clubs to reopen as soon as possible, and not just because of their work. Clubbing wasn’t just about music, said Marea Stamper, a DJ better known as Blessed Madonna, after playing a set at the Liverpool event. “We come to raves to dance, drink, fall in love, meet our friends,” she said. Nightclubs create communities, she added, “and cutting that off is horrible.”

“It’s not just a party,” she added. “It’s never just a party.”

This sense of community was evident in Liverpool at 7:30 p.m. when Yousef Zahar, DJ and co-owner of Circus, the organizer of the event, took the stage. For his first track, he put on an emotional house tune called “When We Were Free” that he played in the middle of Britain’s third lockdown last year.

It seemed like an odd choice for an event celebrating the club’s return, but as it came to an end he began to rehearse a rehearsal of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to play “I Have a Dream”. “Finally free, finally free; Thank God Almighty, we are finally free, ”said Dr. King and his voice boomed through the warehouse.

Then, as green lights flashed over the crowd, Zahar dropped Ultra Naté’s “Free,” a 90s dance hit. As soon as it reached its euphoric chorus – “You are free to do what you want” – confetti cannons went off and sprayed paper all over the crowd, and the ravers began to sing along. For the rest of the night they would follow the advice of the song.

Categories
Entertainment

Rossini on the Drive-In, as San Francisco Opera Returns

SAN FRANCISCO – It feels almost too good to be true after a pandemic closure of the Wagner scale: an audience watching a cast of singers enter the War Memorial Opera House here to watch Rossini’s classic comedy “The Barber of Seville ”to rehearse and perform.

And in fact we’re not quite there yet. After 16 months, the San Francisco Opera returned last week to perform live with The Barber of Seville, but not inside the War Memorial, his usual home. Rather, it showcases the work about 20 miles north in a Marin County park through May 15. The cast for this abridged version is reduced to six main characters who appear as singers who are back working in the opera house to impersonate their Rossinians.

Much of the plot was redesigned as a rehearsal day, culminating in a performance of the final scenes “on” the War Memorial stage. By then, contemporary street clothing had been replaced by 18th century style costumes – the illusion of art was finally restored.

“We wanted to ignite and celebrate the return of this living, breathing art form with a sense of joy, hope and healing,” said Matthew Ozawa, who adapted the opera and directed the production, in an interview. “The audience really needs laughter and catharsis.”

The San Francisco Opera needs it too. With the centenary season rapidly approaching in 2022-2022, the company seeks to write the most dramatic crisis and comeback chapter in its history at breakneck speed.

The damage was brutal. Arts organizations around the world have been devastated by pandemic shutdowns, but San Francisco has been closed for significantly longer than most. Due to the structure of the season, which divides the calendar into autumn and spring-summer segments, the last personal performance was in December 2019.

This enforced silence resulted in high costs: Eight productions had to be canceled, which wiped out the ticket revenue of around 7.5 million US dollars. The company, which was already struggling with deficits before the pandemic, had to cut its budget of around $ 70 million by around $ 20 million. In September, the orchestra agreed to a new contract that includes the cuts in compensation that the musicians have described as “devastating”.

“We felt it was so important to get back playing live when we can,” said Matthew Shilvock, the company’s general manager. “There was such a hunger, a need for it in the community.”

As with opera houses in Detroit, Chicago, Memphis, New York State and elsewhere, San Francisco’s return has a retro forerunner: the drive-in. “The Barber of Seville” is presented on an open-air stage set up in the Marin Center in San Rafael. In their cars, viewers can opt for premium seats with a direct view of the stage or for an adjacent area in which the opera is broadcast on a large film screen at the same time – with a total capacity of around 400 cars.

The logistics required for this were complex – not only to adapt to an unfamiliar space, but also because of the Covid protocols, which were among the strictest in the country in the Bay Area. The company has adhered to a strict testing and masking regime. Brass players have used specially designed masks, and during rehearsals the singers wore masks designed by Dr. Sanziana Roman, an opera singer who became an endocrine surgeon. Even during performances, performers must be at least 8.5 feet apart – 15 feet if they are singing directly to someone else.

Shilvock realized in December that it might be possible to bring the live opera back to the time of the originally planned April production of “Barber”, but only if he could “remove as much uncertainty as possible.” The idea of ​​a drive-in presentation took shape. However, that meant ditching the company’s in-house production and conceiving and designing a brand new staging in just a few months.

A village with tents backstage houses the infrastructure and staff needed to run the show. A tent acts as an orchestra pit in which the conductor Roderick Cox leads a reduced ensemble of 18 players on his company debut. In addition to adapting to the use of video screens to communicate with the singers – while wearing a mask – Cox found an additional challenge in the absence of audible responses from the audience.

“I had to rethink some of my tempos and how to keep that excitement going,” he said. “To know when to give a little more gas.”

The sound of the orchestra is mixed with that of the singers and broadcast live as an FM signal to the radio of each car. “Instead of sounding through large groups of loudspeakers over a huge parking lot,” said Shilvock, “it comes straight into your vehicle from the stage and from the orchestra tent.”

A sense of drive-in populism – taking into account the comfort and attention span of automotive listeners – led to the decision to feature a streamlined, non-stop, English-speaking “barber” that is around 100 minutes long. The entire recitative is cut along with the refrains.

The famous War Memorial Opera House is evoked by projections of the theater’s exterior and replicas of its dressing rooms as part of Alexander V. Nichols’ two-story set. Ozawa’s staging takes up the transition back to live performance as a poignant theme: the singers have to negotiate a maze of detached precautionary measures with sometimes witty self-confidence, but with the hopeful feeling that they will soon be able to return to much-missed theater.

The mezzo-soprano Daniela Mack, who appears as Rosina, spoke in an interview about the cathartic effect of finally being able to “perform for real people in order to have this connection to an audience”. Tenor Alek Shrader, her lover in the opera and her husband in real life, said he felt “a combination of nostalgia and excitement for what is to come”.

For all the novelty of the production, the familiar ease with which the cast interacted was reassuring. Mack and Shrader repeat roles they previously played alongside Lucas Meachem’s charismatic Figaro here in San Francisco. And Catherine Cook’s likable housekeeper Berta has been an integral part of “Barber” in the company since the 1990s. All four as well as Philip Skinner (Dr. Bartolo) and Kenneth Kellogg (Don Basilio) emerged from the Adler Fellowship program for young artists in San Francisco.

Shilvock said the cost of producing “Barber” was comparable to what the company would have spent for the planned 2021 summer season. However, the construction of the temporary venue and the Covid restrictions resulted in additional costs of between $ 2 million and $ 3 million.

Still, Shilvock said it was worth it – and on the opening night on April 23, the curtain calls were greeted with a lush horn choir. Shilvock said around a third of “barber” ticket buyers were new to the company.

“I don’t see this in any way just as a band-aid to get us to the point where we can get back to normal,” he said. “I see this more as a signpost for something new in our future. It creates this energy for opera for people who otherwise would never have given us a thought. “