Tag Archives: Andrew Smith

Shell's Latest Move Highlights Challenges Facing Australian Refiners

By Arjun Sreekumar, The Motley Fool

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Royal Dutch Shell recently said that it’s looking to offload its last remaining refinery in australia, as the oil and gas company reconsiders its operations in the country. Shell is currently searching for a buyer for its 120,000-barrel a day Geelong refinery in southeastern australia, as it refocuses its investment toward large-scale facilities in the Asia-Pacific region, such as its Pulau Bukom refinery in Singapore.  

The Geelong refinery, which has been operating for more than five decades, produces a diverse array of products, including ultralow-sulfur diesel. According to statistics from the Oil & Gas Journal, Geelong has a capacity of 113,500 barrels per calendar day, or b/cd, for hydrotreating, 40,000 b/cd for catalytic cracking, 20,000 b/cd for cyclic catalytic reforming, and 11,000 b/cd for semiregenerative catalytic reforming.

Andrew Smith, vice president at Shell Refining australia, said he hopes to finish up the sale process by the end of 2014. If the company fails to receive an attractive offer, it has the option of converting the plant into an import terminal, a process currently under way at Shell’s former Clyde refinery in Sydney.

In a separate decision, Caltex Australia, which is partially owned by Chevron , recently said it will also be converting its Kurnell refinery — also in Sydney — to an import terminal.  

Australia to become major oil importer
Since Shell and Caltex Australia announced the closure of two ageing refineries near Sydney last year, Australia‘s refining capacity has been reduced by almost a third. Growing competition from Asia and weak margins are the two major factors behind the country’s spate of recent refinery closures. In addition, Australia-based refineries are struggling with high global crude prices and a strong Australian dollar, which has led to higher labor and financing costs.

That’s worrying, because fuel demand in the country is growing rapidly. In fact, Australia is expected to become the Asia-Pacific region’s largest importer of refined products, as domestic fuel demand continues to rise and as smaller, older refining plants are closed down. According to estimates by the nation’s Bureau of Resources and Energy Economics, Australia is expected to import nearly half the fuel its economy consumes this year.

Potential risks
The changing dynamics of Australia‘s energy market have drawn the attention of several large commodities trading houses, including Trafigura, that are seeking to capitalize on the country’s rising fuel imports. However, some commentators have voiced their skepticism about the expected rise in Australia‘s oil imports, citing a potential downturn in the nation’s resource boom as a major risk.

Australia was one of the few countries that emerged relatively unscathed from the global financial crisis and has enjoyed robust economic growth over the past few years, led by a surge in foreign investment into its resource sector. But the country’s resource boom is inextricably tied to China‘s economy and its demand for coal, iron ore, and aluminum. That leaves it especially vulnerable …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

2 charged in kidnap, assault of Calf. girl, 10

The knifepoint kidnapping and sexual assault of a 10-year-old girl started as a burglary, until the suspect apparently changed his mind and took the child from her San Fernando Valley bedroom, police said.

New details in the case were released Wednesday along with charges against 30-year-old Tobias Summers, who remains a fugitive.

Summers was charged with kidnapping burglary and nearly three dozen counts of sexual assault. If convicted, he faces multiple life terms in prison.

His alleged accomplice Daniel Martinez, 29, was also charged in the kidnapping Wednesday. He was in custody after his Monday arrest.

According to police, Summers broke into the house in the middle of the night March 27 while Martinez waited in a getaway car. Summers emerged from the home with the girl and they both got in the car.

Martinez drove a short distance and then abandoned the vehicle and disappeared. Summers took the girl to a vacant home nearby where he held her captive, police said.

At some point, according to a criminal complaint, Summers sexually assaulted her and forced her to pose for nude photos. The girl turned up about 12 hours later after the harrowing ordeal, disoriented and disheveled.

Police Cmdr. Andrew Smith said it was unclear why Summers abducted the girl but investigators don’t believe he had targeted her when he initially went to the home.

Martinez was charged with one count each of kidnapping and burglary. He faces a maximum 12-year prison term if found guilty. A phone message left for deputy public defender Robert Kayne was not immediately returned.

The girl was snatched from her bedroom and was found wandering near a Starbucks about six miles away. She was barefoot, had bruises and scratches, and wasn’t wearing the same clothes she had on when she vanished.

Both men have had problems with law enforcement in the past. Summers has a criminal record dating back to 2002 that includes arrests for robbery, battery and grand theft auto. Court records show Martinez has been convicted of burglary and grand theft.

Police have received more than 130 tips in recent days regarding Summers, who they believe may have fled …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Suspects sought in 12-hour abduction of Los Angeles girl, 10, from bedroom

Los Angeles police are asking the public’s help in finding two men suspected of forcing a 10-year-old girl from her bedroom and holding her for nearly 12 hours before leaving her miles away near a hospital.

More than 20 detectives are working on the abduction case and have located one of the two vehicles believed to have been used, LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith said Thursday.

The men, who were strangers to the girl, took her to several different locations after she was taken Wednesday morning, Smith said.

Investigators have cordoned off several crime scenes including houses and a storage facility in the investigation and manhunt.

The girl, who was found with cuts and bruises on her face and was treated at a hospital, had been awake for much of her ordeal and has been resting at home, but detectives planned to interview here again, Smith said.

Meanwhile, police were canvassing the area’s surveillance cameras, checking local registered sex offenders, and digging into any possible clues related to the girl’s family, acquaintances and Internet contacts.

While parents should be cautious, there have been no recent similar kidnappings in Los Angeles and such abductions are exceedingly uncommon in the United States.

Right now we’re looking at this as an abduction, a stranger abduction, one of those things that’s very, very rare in this country but does happen,” Smith said.

Police said one of the men was about 18 years old but they released no description of the other.

The girl’s parents reported her missing just before 4 a.m. Wednesday. More than 11 hours later, someone who recognized her from media reports spotted her outside a Starbucks shop and summoned police officers who happened to be nearby.

Police later learned the girl had been dropped off at a hospital a few blocks away and had wandered to the area around the coffee shop, Hayes said.

Police released the girl’s name, description and a photo in an urgent campaign seeking the public’s help in spotting the child with distinctive long red hair. After she was found, police asked media to stop using the name and photo.

Smith said the request came “due to the confidentiality of her being a juvenile and her being the victim of a serious crime,” and at the request of her parents.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Judge allows tapes to be released to LAPD in probe into possible unsolved Manson murders

A federal judge in Texas has ruled that the Los Angeles Police Department should be able to obtain the decades-old taped conversations between a Manson family disciple and his attorney.

U.S. District Judge Richard A. Schell of Plano wrote in an order Sunday that Charles “Tex” Watson waived his right to attorney-client privilege when he allowed his lawyer to sell the eight cassette tapes to an author nearly 40 years ago for a book about the convicted murderer’s life.

The ruling affirms a bankruptcy judge’s decision that Watson, who’s serving a life sentence in California for his role in the 1969 murders of actress Sharon Tate and six others, sought to overturn.

Watson’s attorney, Bill Boyd, died in 2009. The tapes were discovered last year by the trustee handling the Chapter 7 bankruptcy case of the law firm where Boyd was a partner.

Los Angeles police Cmdr. Andrew Smith said Tuesday the department is prepared to send detectives to Texas to pick up the tapes as soon as they are available. However, they will wait until a 30-day window for an appeal passes.

“The LAPD is pleased that the judge ruled in our favor,” Smith said. “We are looking forward to getting these tapes and thoroughly analyzing their contents.”

Smith has said previously that the LAPD believes the tapes could yield clues to unsolved murders. But Watson has indicated that the Manson family wasn’t responsible for any other killings.

Fort Worth lawyer Kelly Puls, who is representing Watson in the tapes matter, said Tuesday he would talk to Watson about appealing Schell’s ruling.

“We’re going to be looking at all our options,” Puls said.

Schell said Watson, now 67, gave up his right to attorney-client privilege when he allowed Boyd to sell a copy of the tapes to Chaplain Raymond G. Hoekstra with the International Prison Ministries in 1976.

The $49,000 Boyd received was a partial payment for legal fees. The taped conversations became part of Hoekstra’s book “Will You Die for Me? The Man Who Killed for Charles Manson Tells His Own Story: Tex Watson as told to Chaplain Ray.”

Moreover, a previous court filing in which Watson said he’s willing to allow the LAPD to listen to the tapes “alone constitutes a waiver of attorney-client privilege,” Schell wrote.

In putting the case in front of Schell, Watson was appealing a ruling by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Brenda T. Rhoades last May that gave the trustee, Linda Payne, permission to comply with a written request from the LAPD that the tapes go to the department.

The LAPD sought to use a search warrant to obtain the tapes from Payne last October, but Schell blocked that effort, characterizing it as an attempt to circumvent his order that made the tapes off-limits until he could rule on them.

Watson, a native of the small North Texas community of Copeville, was a key figure in the Tate-La Bianca murders, one of the most notorious crimes of the 20th century. He, Manson and three others were sentenced to death, but the sentences were commuted to life in prison …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

$1M reward for ex-Los Angeles officer prompts tips

Southern California authorities were investigating hundreds of tips Monday after offering a $1 million reward for information leading to the arrest of a fugitive ex-police officer wanted in the slayings of three people.

The manhunt for Christopher Dorner, 33, coupled with added security at Sunday’s Grammy Awards, left the ranks of the Los Angeles Police Department stretched thin.

Along with responding to routine calls for service, police have been protecting dozens of families considered possible targets of Dorner, based on his alleged Facebook rant against those he held responsible for ending his career with the LAPD five years ago.

“Our dedication to catch this killer remains steadfast,” Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said. “We will not tolerate this reign of terror.”

Police and city officials believe the $1 million reward, raised from both public and private sources, will encourage the public to stay vigilant.

“This is not about catching a fugitive suspect, it’s about preventing a future crime, most likely a murder,” LAPD Chief Charlie Beck said. “This is an act, make no mistake about it, of domestic terrorism.”

Beck deflected questions about whether the reward would be paid if Dorner was found dead or alive. He called the phrase “ugly” and said he hoped no one else was injured in the ordeal, including the suspect.

As the search dragged on, worrisome questions emerged: How long could the intense search be sustained? And, if Dorner keeps evading capture, how do authorities protect dozens of former police colleagues?

LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith said the department has deployed 50 protection details to guard officers and their families who were deemed possible targets.

And there are no plans to reduce protection until Dorner is in custody, Los Angeles police Sgt. Rudy Lopez said.

“We realize it costs money and it gets expensive,” said Chuck Drago, a Florida-based police consultant. “But this is as clear of a threat as you can get. The money is always an issue but not when it’s somebody’s life at stake.”

One tip led police to surround and evacuate a Lowe’s Home Improvement store on Sunday in the San Fernando Valley, but a search yielded …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Women shot in Calif. manhunt will to get new truck

A mother and daughter newspaper delivery team who were mistakenly shot by Los Angeles police hunting for a fugitive former cop will get a new pickup truck courtesy of the department.

LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith says the department’s Chief Charlie Beck met with the women in their Torrance home Saturday to apologize and tell them he had arranged for someone to donate a new pickup truck.

The truck will be donated early this week, Smith said.

The women were accidentally struck by gunfire in the pre-dawn hours Thursday after it was reported that Christopher Dorner was sighted in the area. Beck called it a case of mistaken identity.

Dorner has vowed to avenge his firing from the department, which he wrote in an online manifesto was retaliation for reporting officer violence.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Mountain manhunt underway for ex-cop accused of killing 3 after burned out truck found

Officers are going door to door in a Southern California mountain community attempting to track a fugitive former Los Angeles police officer suspected in three murders after finding his burned out truck in the area, as thousands of officers searched for the suspect across three states and into Mexico.

The suspect has been identified as Christopher Jordan Dorner, 33, and he is considered extremely dangerous and armed with multiple weapons, authorities say. He is accused of killing a college basketball coach and her fiance last weekend, then following through on a vow to kill police by opening fire Wednesday night on three officers, killing one.

The killings appear to be retaliation for his 2008 termination from the Los Angeles Police Department for making false statements, authorities say. Dorner posted an online manifesto that warned, “I will bring unconventional and asymmetrical warfare to those in LAPD uniform whether on or off duty.”

It also asserted: “Unfortunately, I will not be alive to see my name cleared. That’s what this is about, my name. A man is nothing without his name.”

Los Angeles police believe the manifesto posted to Facebook was written by Dorner because there are details in it only he would know.

“In this case, we’re his target,” Sgt. Rudy Lopez from the Corona Police Department told reporters Thursday morning after an attack on the department’s officers.

Law enforcement officials are also inspecting a package CNN anchor Anderson Cooper apparently received from Dorner at the beginning of the month.

CNN spokeswoman Shimrit Sheetrit said Thursday that a parcel containing a note, a DVD and a bullet hole-riddled memento were sent by Christopher Dorner and addressed to Cooper’s office.

LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith says LAPD robbery-homicide detectives will inspect the package for clues. The package arrived Feb. 1, days before the first two killings Dorner is accused of.

It contained a note on it that read, in part, “I never lied.”

Dorner’s pickup truck was found burned out near the Big Bear ski area Thursday morning about 80 miles east of Los Angeles. A 10-man tactical team arrived to search the surrounding area. Several Big Bear schools were put on lock-down, and the ski resort closed its slopes, as FBI agents manned a checkpoint to question drivers leaving the area.

San Bernardino County Sheriff John McMahon said 125 officers were going door to door and attempting to track the suspect, and that a SWAT team was providing added security to those in the community.

“Certainly he could be anywhere at this point. That’s why were searching door to door,” McMahon said.

A U.S. Marshals Service official says the search for Dorner has expanded from California to Nevada, Arizona and Mexico.

The massive manhunt began after Dorner was linked to a weekend killing, in which one of the victims was the daughter of a former police captain who had represented Dorner during his disciplinary hearing. Authorities think Dorner followed up that attack by opening fire late Wednesday on police in cities east of Los Angeles, killing an officer and wounding another.

‘I never had the opportunity to …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

LAPD: Ex-officer suspect in Riverside cop killing

Police launched a massive manhunt for a former Los Angeles officer suspected of killing a couple over the weekend and opening fire on four officers early Thursday, killing one and critically wounding another, authorities said.

The search for Christopher Dorner, who was fired from the Los Angeles Police Department in 2008 for making false statements, began after he was linked to the weekend killing in which one of the victims was the daughter of a former police captain who had represented him during those disciplinary proceedings.

Early Thursday, police came under fire in two separate shootings in Riverside County, east of Los Angeles.

The first occurred in Corona and involved two LAPD officers working a security detail, LAPD Sgt. Alex Baez. One officer was grazed. Later, two officers on routine patrol in neighboring Riverside were ambushed at a stop light, said Riverside Lt. Guy Toussaint. One died and the other was in surgery.

The Riverside officers shot overnight were not actively looking for Dorner, Toussaint said.

“We’re asking our officers to be extraordinarily cautious just as we’re asking the public to be extraordinarily cautious with this guy. He’s already demonstrated he has a propensity for shooting innocent people. We can’t provide a lot of information now because we’re trying to capture him,” said Cmdr. Andrew Smith. “We don’t know where he is. We’re looking for the public’s help to locate this guy. Anybody who sees him or believes they see him or his vehicle should call 911.”

Dorner’s LAPD badge and an ID were found near San Diego‘s airport and were turned in to police at early Thursday, San Diego police Sgt. Ray Battrick said.

Dorner is wanted in the killings of Monica Quan and her fiance, Keith Lawrence, who were found shot to death in their car at a parking structure Sunday night, Irvine police Chief David L. Maggard said at a news conference Wednesday night.

Dorner, 33, implicated himself in the killings with a multi-page “manifesto” that he wrote that included threats against several people, including members of the LAPD, police said. They gave no further details on the document or its contents.

Autopsies showed that Quan and Lawrence were killed by multiple gunshot wounds in the parking structure at their condominium in Irvine, Orange County sheriff’s spokesman Jim Amormino said …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News