Media ‘blackout’ as Bush speaks in Cayman Islands

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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GEORGE TOWN, Cayman Islands – Organizers of an investment conference in the Cayman Islands say they have been forbidden from disclosing any details about a speech by former President George W. Bush in the offshore financial haven, an event spokesman said Thursday.

The keynote speech by the former president is “totally closed to all journalists,” and conference organizers are forbidden from discussing any aspect of it even in general terms, spokesman Dan Kneipp said.

“We’ve got a complete blackout on discussing the Bush details,” Kneipp told The Associated Press.

The restrictions were imposed by the former president’s staff, he said. Bush was scheduled to speak Thursday evening at The Ritz-Carlton on Grand Cayman Island.

“It’s totally their decision,” Kneipp said of the decision to close the event to the media.

Sponsors of the two-day conference include KPMG, a company that provides tax advisory services, and Deutsche Bank. It costs $4,000 to attend and other speakers include billionaire Richard Branson.

Cayman Islands officials are proud of the British territory’s role as an offshore finance center. But members of the U.S. Congress and advocates for changes in tax laws have accused corporations and wealthy individuals of using so-called financial havens to improperly avoid taxes.

Celtic treasure valued at $16.5 million discovered in Jersey

Russia Today

June 27, 2012

Amateur archaeologists have unearthed one of the biggest buried treasures in the Europe, almost a ton of gold and silver coins dating back almost 2000 years.

The treasure was discovered on Jersey, one of the British Channel Islands off the coast of Northern France. The exact quantity of coins in the find has yet to be determined, as over the time metal mixed with clay pressed into what now looks more like a mass of bullion. Preliminary estimates suggest there might be between 30,000 and 50,000 coins. The value of the find may be anything between $5 million to $16.5 million.

Reports say that the coins date to 50 BC.  The Celtic tribe of Corisolites apparently used these coins.

Scientists believe the fortune might have been buried on Jersey by the French Celts ahead of the Roman invasion led by Julius Caesar in the middle of the 1st century BC.

The area of Grouville on Jersey has long attracted local treasure hunters. The lucky ones were Reg Mead and Richard Miles, who have been searching for the treasure for 30 years.

“We hit something hard, put the trowel hit, the shovel in, and just moved it, and you hear that grinding noise of metal rubbing against metal. We just flicked it up and up came five Iron Age coins,”
ITV news quotes the lucky treasure hunters as saying.