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2023 m. liepos 5 d., trečiadienis

U.S. Pays For Police All Over the World --- Units pursue matters from heroin smuggling to protecting pangolins.

"NAIROBI -- The sting operation went off perfectly. Kenyan police detectives subsidized by the U.S. government pretended to be in the market for a live pangolin, an endangered, armadillo-like animal whose scales and meat fetch a high price in parts of Asia.

A Kenyan undercover agent flashed a wad of cash and invited the alleged ringleader of the poaching gang to close the sale inside a black Land Cruiser, rented with funds from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Within moments, Kenyan police surrounded the SUV and arrested three suspects. An officer designated as pangolin-handler donned leather gloves, seized the animal, which curled up into a defensive ball, and secured it in a wooden crate padded with fabric.

The arrest of the alleged pangolin traffickers in August, on Kenya's Indian Ocean coast, was a tiny victory for wildlife conservation. Some 2.7 million pangolins are poached in Africa each year, pushing them to the edge of extinction, according to the African Wildlife Foundation.

It was als a prime example of how U.S. law-enforcement agents operate behind-the-scenes overseas. In more than a dozen developing countries where the U.S. believes police agencies are so riddled with corruption that they can't be trusted, American embassy personnel handpick their own local law-enforcement units, screen them for misconduct and, to a large degree, assign them missions aligned with U.S. interests.

The U.S. State Department's Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs says it has vetted members of 105 police units worldwide for agencies including the Bureau of Diplomatic Security, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Homeland Security.

Because some agencies do their own vetting, the State Department said it was unable to provide a global count of U.S.-aligned units or the officers they employ. It said there was no central office tracking all of the units' activities or the total government spending that goes into them.

The State Department Bureau of Diplomatic Security alone says it has 16 vetted units established under agreements with governments from Peru to the Philippines. The Fish and Wildlife Service funds police in Uganda and Nigeria.

In Kenya, the FBI, Homeland Security, Drug Enforcement Administration and Fish and Wildlife Service each have their own vetted detectives from the Kenyan Directorate of Criminal Investigations. The units pursue matters ranging from heroin smuggling to passport and visa forgery to human trafficking and criminal abuse of American citizens. American agents stationed at the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi don't have arrest powers in Kenya, but their local partners do.

Kenyan officials stress that the units ultimately answer to Mohamed Amin, Kenya's director of criminal investigations, in keeping with local law and the U.S.-Kenyan agreements that established them. 

In practical terms, the Kenyan detectives often take strong guidance from U.S. embassy officials.

"We, for the most part, have operational control," said Supervisory Special Agent Ryan Williams of the State Department Bureau of Diplomatic Security, who directed a five-person Kenyan police unit out of the U.S. embassy in Nairobi. Kenyan detectives undergo a polygraph test before being offered a position in the unit.

The global spread of U.S.-vetted foreign police units is little known and faces little public scrutiny. Some Kenyans who do know of the units' existence bridle at the notion that foreigners wield so much influence in domestic law enforcement. "They don't have autonomy," Murigi Kamande, lawyer for the alleged pangolin traffickers, said of the vetted officers. "They basically work at the behest of a foreign nation. It's not right."

The DEA pioneered the strategy during the cocaine wars in Colombia, Bolivia and Peru in the 1980s. Resident American narcotics agents, frustrated by the drug cartels' influence over local police, took it upon themselves to identify officers they felt they could trust, according to research conducted at the time by Ethan Nadelmann, then a Princeton University professor. At the time, the DEA's ability to keep vetted units clean and effective depended on extensive diplomatic pressure from the U.S. government, Nadelmann found.

Now the practice has become routine and global for law-enforcement agencies throughout the U.S. government. The units operate under memorandums of understanding between the U.S. and local authorities.

In May, a vetted American embassy unit in the South American country of Guyana helped track down and arrest a man wanted in the U.S. for sexual assault of a child, according to the State Department. A Colombian unit dismantled a seven-city human-smuggling operation that was charging $4,000 to $5,000 a head to provide migrants with fake documents to secure U.S. visas, according to Colombian and U.S. authorities.

Kenyan officers who win positions in vetted units get upgraded training, the prestige of working in an elite squad and, depending on the unit, as much as twice their usual pay. U.S. agencies provide intelligence they might not share with ordinary Kenyan police.

"The benefits of such collaborations and partnerships are immense, and the most important being the assurance of the safety and security of the people we serve," said Inspector Mike Mugo, a spokesman for the Kenyan Directorate of Criminal Investigations, or DCI.

Vetted units tend to perform significantly better than their un-vetted counterparts, securing higher arrest, prosecution and conviction rates, according to a U.S. Embassy spokesman in Nairobi.

There have been a few instances in which detectives from vetted units have proven corrupt, but the embassy spokesman said the "bad actors were quickly identified, removed and replaced before there could be significant impacts." Those Kenyan officers were usually exposed through repeated lie-detector testing, the spokesman said.

Mugo, the Kenyan DCI spokesman, said he knew of no cases in which vetted officers had compromised investigations or otherwise been corrupted.

In recent months, DCI chief Amin has appeared alongside U.S. Ambassador Meg Whitman to announce American reward money for wanted terror suspects and to preside over the destruction of tons of allegedly smuggled sandalwood, an endangered tree.

The Kenyan National Police Service has been criticized by civil-society groups and politicians for rampant corruption and other serious problems. Traffic officers routinely demand bribes from drivers. The country's president, William Ruto, accused the DCI's elite Special Services Unit of extrajudicial killings and closed it down last year.

"We cannot deny the fact that we have a few rogue police officers in the service, just like we have errant officers in other professions," said Mugo, the DCI spokesman.

Still, the first rule for the elite Kenyan units assigned to the U.S. Embassy is that they don't tell other police the plan. The vetted officers know that if word of an operation leaks, the chances are that when they arrive, the elephant ivory would be hidden or the fake U.S. passports destroyed.

"Even police are our own enemies sometimes," said Inspector Josphine Korir, who runs the nine-officer Kenyan wildlife-crime unit. Her team is funded by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which is required by U.S. law to combat trafficking in protected species.

The Kenyan diplomatic-security team directed by Agent Williams of the U.S. Embassy focuses on gangs that forge U.S. passports. Increasingly the officers have been rescuing young Somali-Americans from centers that market themselves to desperate diaspora parents as experts in drug treatment and Islamic education, but can be abusive.

In September, Williams got a tip that U.S. citizens were being held against their will at Mustaqim Rehabilitation Centre in Nairobi's heavily Somali Eastleigh neighborhood. The U.S. Embassy considers the densely populated area too dangerous for Americans and Williams himself couldn't go on the raid. His Kenyan team assembled unmarked SUVs at a nearby police station, but didn't tell the station commander the details of their operation. Twice before, the unit had raided rehab centers only to find staff had been tipped off and moved the Americans elsewhere.

This time, a Kenyan reconnaissance team loitered outside of the rehabilitation center in the morning, watching who came and who went. Then the police raiding team pulled up, pretending to be health officials conducting a routine welfare check.

The officers pushed their way into the padlocked inner courtyard, where dozens of young men wandered aimlessly or knelt in prayer.

The detectives demanded the staff identify the foreign residents. Among them was a slender 16-year-old in a North Face hoodie. He was born in Minneapolis and said his mother had had him taken in handcuffs to Mustaqim six weeks earlier due to his errant teenage behavior. "She thought it was a good place," the boy said. Instead, residents complained to police that they were routinely beaten and chained up.

The center's director, Ahmed Mohamed Abdi, dismissed their allegations. "As long as someone is here, they'll complain about something," he said, although he acknowledged that residents who don't comply with Islamic teachings are locked in a punishment room.

The detectives bundled two Americans and two Britons into the vehicles and drove them to a police station. They left young Somali-Kenyan men and women at the center, despite their pleas to leave. The U.S. Embassy contacted the U.K. High Commission to care for the Britons and offered the Americans hotel rooms for the night and tickets back to the U.S.

The three alleged pangolin poachers arrested in August pleaded not guilty in Kenyan court. They face a minimum of three years in prison if convicted, according to their lawyer. Like most Kenyans, the presiding judge had never seen a pangolin. During one hearing, the U.S.-funded police adviser googled "pangolin" and approached the bench to show the judge what the case was all about. The animal, which weighed 29 pounds, had a street value of $30,000, according to a court document. Wildlife officials tagged the rescued pangolin with a tracking device and released it into a forest. Later the pangolin was spotted alive, but without the device; officials suspect a hyena chewed it off." [1]

1. U.S. Funds Police All Over the World --- Units pursue matters from heroin smuggling to protecting pangolins. Phillips, Michael M. 
Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]. 05 July 2023: A.1.

 

Retirement Advice From Those Who Learned the Hard Way --- Regrets of their postwork lives include not giving more time to health, finances and relationships.


"Thousands of Americans retire every day short on cash, friendships and plans.

Many retirees say they realized too late how they could have prepared for a more financially secure and rewarding postwork life. They would have focused on saving more money to cover the higher cost of living. Or they would have put more time into building relationships, taking better care of their health or cultivating new pursuits.

One reason retirement is so hard to prepare for is we often lack models of postwork life to emulate, retirees and financial advisers say. Though our culture is awash with images of professional success, we are a little hazier on what retirement success looks like and what it takes to achieve.

To sharpen that picture, we asked retirees about what they would do differently if given a second chance. Their regrets offer insights that can help people think and plan better at every life stage.

"Regret makes us feel bad, but it can help us do better," said Daniel Pink, who researched people's relationships to regret across a range of areas for his book "The Power of Regret."

Here are three lessons retirees say they wish they had known sooner.

Investing for retirement means more than money

Jim Pilzner, a retired entrepreneur, regrets not setting goals for himself when he retired about four years ago. Now 78, he found there is only so much golf to play and only so many lunches to go to.

"I would counsel my younger self, and any other active, achieving person to recognize what drives them and what success really means," said Pilzner.

He eventually figured out that the two things that motivated him most during his career -- taking action and learning new things -- were the same recipe he needed for retirement.

So this spring he enrolled at University of Nevada, Reno with two classes (earning a 4.0) and will be full-time in the fall. He is studying for a degree in political science and history.

Retirees frequently don't realize how much their career provided a sense of identity and self-worth. Many fail to grasp the need to plan for a different source of purpose in retirement, said Betty Wang, a financial adviser in Denver.

People carefully plan how they will spend money in retirement but often give far less thought to how to spend their time.

Jay Holt, 74, regrets not retiring sooner. He planned to spend his postwork years playing polo. But in 2015, he fell while playing and had to give up the sport.

The resident of Cincinnatus, N.Y., who retired in 2013 at age 64, now wishes he had had a few more years in which to enjoy this activity.

Relationships are the key to retirement

The best predictor of longevity, health and happiness in later life is the quality of your relationships. That is the finding of the Harvard Study of Adult Development, which has followed families for decades.

Dan Roberts, 72, in Idyllwild, Calif., wishes he had kept up with former colleagues for personal and professional reasons.

Roberts retired about 18 months ago. Soon after, his son and his family, who were living just two hours away, moved to New Zealand.

Roberts and his wife, Robin Roberts, said only two visits a year are doable on their budget. He said he would have been able to afford more-frequent trips had he kept the door open to contract work by maintaining both his relationships with former colleagues and a project-management certification.

"We miss our grandchildren terribly," his wife said.

David Edmisten, an adviser in Prescott, Ariz., said clients sometimes regret delaying retirement for this reason. The extra years working come at the cost of missing time with family and friends and postponing trips, he said.

"Some even had people close to them pass away and regret not being able to spend more time with their loved ones while they still could," Edmisten said.

Retirement is longer than you think

Arthur Parmentier, 69, regrets retiring at 65, rather than working a few more years, partly because he missed out on a few more years of contributions to his retirement account.

The Providence, R.I., resident claimed Social Security at 65, accepting a lower monthly benefit than he would have received by waiting.

"Had I waited two more years or maybe three, I would have been quite comfortable, but right now, I'm living on Social Security and trying not to touch my IRA," said Parmentier. "I think now that I may live well into my 80s, so I have to be prepared for that and make sure my IRA will last me throughout those years."

The life expectancy for a 65-year-old is 84 for men and nearly 87 for women, according to projections by the Society of Actuaries based on 2019 data.

 Surveys suggest many Americans vastly underestimate those numbers. Of 1,500 adults ages 45 to 80 polled by the Society of Actuaries in 2015, 41% of preretirees and 37% of retirees underestimated their life expectancy by five or more years, while 14% of preretirees and 18% of retirees underestimated it by two to four years.

Social Security allows people to start their retirement benefits any time between ages 62 and 70, and increases the payment for every month of delay.

For many, the math favors starting at 70, when monthly benefits before cost-of-living adjustments are 76% higher than at 62, according to Laurence Kotlikoff, a Boston University economist.

A person who postpones benefits until age 70 instead of 62 would have to live to at least 80 to come out ahead, said Kotlikoff, founder of MaximizeMySocialSecurity.com, which advises people on claiming decisions." [1]

1. Retirement Advice From Those Who Learned the Hard Way --- Regrets of their postwork lives include not giving more time to health, finances and relationships. Dagher, Veronica; Tergesen, Anne. 
Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]. 05 July 2023: A.9. 

 

Patarimai išėjimui į pensiją iš tų, kurie brangiai sumokėjo už pamokas --- Apgailestauja dėl savo gyvenimo po darbo, kad neskiria daugiau laiko sveikatai, finansams ir santykiams

  „Tūkstančiai amerikiečių kasdien išeina į pensiją, neturėdami pinigų, draugystės ir planų.

 

     Daugelis pensininkų sako per vėlai supratę, kaip galėjo pasiruošti finansiškai saugesniam ir naudingesniam gyvenimui po darbo. Jie būtų sutelkę dėmesį į tai, kad sutaupytų daugiau pinigų, kad padengtų didesnes pragyvenimo išlaidas. Arba jie būtų skyrę daugiau laiko santykiams užmegzti, geriau rūpintis savo sveikata ar puoselėti naujus užsiėmimus.

 

     Viena iš priežasčių, dėl kurių taip sunku pasirengti išėjimui į pensiją, yra ta, kad dažnai trūksta gyvenimo po darbo modelių, į kuriuos būtų galima lygiuotis, sako pensininkai ir finansų patarėjai. Nors mūsų kultūroje gausu profesinės sėkmės vaizdų, mes šiek tiek miglotesni, kai žiūrime į tai, kaip atrodo sėkmė, išėjus į pensiją ir ko reikia, norint ją pasiekti.

 

     Norėdami paryškinti šį vaizdą, paklausėme pensininkų, ką jie darytų kitaip, jei jiems būtų suteikta antra galimybė. Jų apgailestavimas suteikia įžvalgų, kurios gali padėti žmonėms geriau mąstyti ir planuoti kiekvienu gyvenimo etapu.

 

     „Apgailestavimas verčia mus jaustis blogai, bet tai gali padėti mums padaryti geriau“, – sakė Danielis Pinkas, savo knygoje „Apgailestavimo galia“ tyrinėjęs žmonių santykius su apgailestavimu įvairiose srityse.

 

     Štai trys pamokos, kurias pensininkai sako norėję sužinoti anksčiau.

 

     Investuoti į pensiją reiškia daugiau, nei pinigus

 

     Į pensiją išėjęs verslininkas Jimas Pilzneris apgailestauja, kad prieš maždaug ketverius metus išėjęs į pensiją neišsikėlė sau tikslų. Dabar 78-erių jis pastebėjo, kad žaisti golfo galima ne tiek jau daug, o pietauti tik tiek išeina irgi.

 

     „Patarčiau savo jaunesniajam ir bet kuriam kitam aktyviam, daug pasiekiančiam žmogui atpažinti, kas juos skatina ir ką iš tikrųjų reiškia sėkmė“, – sakė Pilzneris.

 

     Galiausiai jis suprato, kad du dalykai, kurie jį labiausiai motyvavo per jo karjerą – imtis veiksmų ir mokytis naujų dalykų – buvo tas pats receptas, kurio jam reikėjo išeiti į pensiją.

 

     Taigi šį pavasarį jis įstojo į Nevados universitetą Reno dviejose klasėse (uždirba 4,0 balo) ir rudenį mokysis pilną laiką. Jis studijuoja politikos mokslų ir istorijos studijas.

 

     Pensininkai dažnai nesuvokia, kiek jų karjera suteikė tapatybės ir savivertės jausmą. Daugelis nesuvokia būtinybės planuoti kitokį išėjimo į pensiją tikslą, sakė Denverio finansų patarėja Betty Wang.

 

     Žmonės kruopščiai planuoja, kaip išleis pinigus išėję į pensiją, tačiau dažnai mažiau galvoja apie tai, kaip leisti laiką.

 

     74 metų Jay Holtas apgailestauja, kad neišėjo į pensiją anksčiau. Po darbo metus jis planavo praleisti žaisdamas polo. Tačiau 2015 metais jis žaisdamas krito ir turėjo mesti sportą.

 

     Sinsinatuso (JAV) gyventojas, išėjęs į pensiją 2013 m., būdamas 64 metų, dabar nori, kad jam būtų tekę dar kelerius metus mėgautis šia veikla.

 

     Santykiai yra raktas į pensiją

 

     Geriausias ilgaamžiškumo, sveikatos ir laimės prognozė vėlesniame gyvenime yra jūsų santykių kokybė. Tokią išvadą padarė Harvardo suaugusiųjų raidos tyrimas, kuris dešimtmečius sekė šeimas.

 

     72 metų Danas Robertsas, gyvenantis Idyllwild mieste, Kalifornijoje, nori, kad būtų neatsilikęs nuo buvusių kolegų dėl asmeninių ir profesinių priežasčių.

 

     Robertsas išėjo į pensiją maždaug prieš 18 mėnesių. Netrukus po to jo sūnus ir jo šeima, gyvenę vos už dviejų valandų, persikėlė į Naująją Zelandiją.

 

     Robertsas ir jo žmona Robin Roberts teigė, kad tik du apsilankymai per metus yra įmanomi iš jų biudžeto. Jis teigė, kad būtų galėjęs sau leisti dažnesnes keliones, jei būtų išlaikęs duris darbui pagal sutartį, palaikydamas ryšius su buvusiais kolegomis ir projekto vadovo pažymėjimą.

 

     „Mes siaubingai pasiilgome anūkų“, – sakė jo žmona.

 

     Davidas Edmistenas, patarėjas Preskote, Arizone, sakė, kad klientai kartais apgailestauja, kad dėl šios priežasties atidėlioja išėjimą į pensiją. Jo teigimu, papildomi darbo metai kainuoja praleistą laiką su šeima ir draugais bei kelionių atidėjimu.

 

     „Kai kuriems net artimi žmonės mirė ir apgailestauja, kad negalėjo praleisti daugiau laiko su savo artimaisiais, kol dar galėjo“, – sakė Edmisten.

 

     Išėjimas į pensiją yra ilgesnis, nei manote

 

     69 metų Arthuras Parmentier apgailestauja, kad sulaukęs 65 metų išėjo į pensiją, o ne dirbo dar keletą metų, iš dalies dėl to, kad praleido dar keletą metų įmokų į savo pensijos sąskaitą.

 

     Providence, R. I., gyventojas socialiniam draudimui reikalavo 65 m., sutikdamas su mažesne mėnesine išmoka, nei būtų gavęs laukdamas.

 

     „Jei būčiau laukęs dar dvejus metus, o gal trejus, būčiau jaustis gana patogiai, bet šiuo metu gyvenu iš socialinio draudimo ir stengiuosi neliesti savo IRA“, – sakė Parmentier. „Dabar manau, kad galiu gerokai sulaukti 80 metų, todėl turiu būti tam pasiruošęs ir užtikrinti, kad mano IRA man ištvers visus tuos metus."

 

     Remiantis Aktuarų draugijos prognozėmis, pagrįstomis 2019 m. duomenimis, 65 metų amžiaus vyrų gyvenimo trukmė yra 84 metai, o moterų – beveik 87 metai.

 

      Apklausos rodo, kad daugelis amerikiečių labai nuvertina tuos skaičius. Iš 2015 m. Aktuarų draugijos apklaustų 1500 suaugusiųjų nuo 45 iki 80 metų 41 % išėjusių į pensiją ir 37 % pensininkų nuvertino savo gyvenimo trukmę penkeriais ar daugiau metų, o 14 % išėjusių į pensiją ir 18 % pensininkų ją neįvertino dvejais.

 

     Socialinė apsauga leidžia žmonėms pradėti mokėti pensijas bet kuriuo metu nuo 62 iki 70 metų ir padidina išmoką už kiekvieną pavėluotą mėnesį.

 

     Pasak Bostono universiteto ekonomisto Laurence'o Kotlikoffo, daugeliui matematika yra palankesnė nuo 70 metų, kai mėnesinė išmoka prieš pragyvenimo išlaidų koregavimą yra 76% didesnė nei 62.

 

     Asmuo, kuris atideda išmokas iki 70 metų, o ne 62 metų, turėtų gyventi mažiausiai iki 80 metų, kad galėtų išeiti į priekį, sakė Kotlikoffas, MaximizeMySocialSecurity.com, kuris pataria žmonėms priimti sprendimus, įkūrėjas." [1]


1. Retirement Advice From Those Who Learned the Hard Way --- Regrets of their postwork lives include not giving more time to health, finances and relationships. Dagher, Veronica; Tergesen, Anne. 
Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]. 05 July 2023: A.9.