NEWS The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 7, 2005 - 5 State senate urges court to withhold benefits for gays LANSING (AP) - The state Senate yester- day approved resolutions urging the Michigan Supreme Court to block public-sector employ- ers, including state government, from provid- ing health insurance to the partners of gay employees until the court makes a final ruling on the issue. The Republican-controlled Senate voted 22- 16, mostly along party lines, to pass two reso- lutions to prevent taxpayer dollars from being spent on same-sex benefits until the court reach- es a final judgment. The measures are symbolic and do not have the force of law. "If we're really concerned about not dis- rupting people's lives, we ought to keep the status quo until the court makes a decision," said Sen. Alan Cropsey, a DeWitt Republican who sponsored the measures. A Supreme Court spokeswoman said the court generally does not comment on pend- ing matters. It's unclear what action, if any, the court could take because the state Court of Appeals normally weighs in on legal cases before the high court does. An Ingham County judge ruled last month that public universities and governments could provide domestic partner benefits without vio- lating a constitutional amendment approved by voters in November. Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm then said she would ask the state Civil Service Commission to approve domestic partner benefits for state employees. The benefits had been included in new labor contracts, but Gra- nholm put them on hold while waiting for a court ruling. The Civil Service Commission's next meet- ing is scheduled for Dec. 13. But the Granholm administration has asked the commission to schedule.a special meeting quickly. "We want to be able to be competitive in the workplace to hire the very best employ- ees to work for the state of Michigan," said David Fink, director of the Office of the State Employer. "While some would argue that a change in the law could be disruptive, in the interim individuals who would otherwise be covered by the benefit would be left unin- sured." A measure passed last year made the union between a man and a woman the only agree- ment recognized as a marriage "or similar union for any purpose." Those six words led to a fight over benefits for gay couples. Republican Attorney General Mike Cox issued an opinion in March saying the measure bars the city of Kalamazoo from providing domestic partner benefits in future contracts. But 21 gay couples who work for Kalamazoo, universities and the state filed a lawsuit chal- lenging Cox's interpretation. Cox plans to appeal the Ingham County judge's ruling, prompting Senate Republicans to push the two resolutions asking the state's highest court to "take whatever steps are necessary to maintain the status quo" until it rules. Sen. Gilda Jacobs (D-Huntington Woods) urged her colleagues Thursday to vote against the measures. "We should be celebrating this great state's diversity, not discriminating against certain people," Jacobs said. Twenty Republicans and two Democrats voted for the resolutions. Fourteen Democrats and two Republicans voted against them. The lawmakers breaking ranks were Repub- licans Shirley Johnson of Troy and Beverly Hammerstrom of Temperance, who voted against the measures, and Democrats Jim Bar- cia of Bay City and Dennis Olshove of War- ren, who voted for them. One of the measures, a concurrent resolu- tion, now heads to the House. I UNDER POWER Chieneys office probed in intel leak WASHINGTON (AP) - FBI agents examined com- puters in Vice President Dick Cheney's office and talked to former and current White House aides Thursday as they investigated an FBI intelligence analyst accused of passing classified information to Filipino officials. Meantime, former Philippine President Joseph Estrada acknowledged receiving an internal U.S. government report on the Philippines from the analyst, Leandro Aragoncillo, but played down the importance of the information, com- paring it to material aired in his country's media. The FBI is looking at whether Aragoncillo, a former Marine, took classified information about the Philippines from the White House when he worked for Vice Presidents Al Gore and Cheney from 1999 to 2002. The type of information has not been disclosed. Though Aragoncillo had top-secret clearance, that status would not have made him privy to highly sensitive intelligence. Aragoncillo, a U.S. citizen originally from the Philip- pines, was charged last month with providing classified information from his FBI posting at Fort Monmouth, N.J., to former and current Philippine officials who oppose Presi- dent Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. Philippine Justice Secretary Raul Gonzales said the criminal complaint against Aragon- cillo suggests the information could have been intended to destabilize the Philippine government. Michael Ray Aquino, a former top Philippine police offi- cial who acted as Aragoncillo's alleged go-between, was indicted by a Newark, N.J., federal grand jury Thursday on charges of conspiracy and acting as an unregistered foreign agent. Aragoncillo, 46, of Woodbury, N.J., and Aquino, 39, living in Queens, N.Y., have been jailed since their arrests last month. Federal prosecutors in Newark did not seek an indict- ment against Aragoncillo because he isnegotiating a plea, court records show. Aquino lawyer Mark A. Berman said his client rejected a plea deal. "There's a fundamental difference between Aragoncillo and Aquino," Berman said. "Aquino is not an FBI agent and had no reason to know that the information the government laid out in the indictment was classified." While the criminal complaint is limited to Aragoncillo's time at Fort Monmouth the investigation has widened to include his stint, while a Marine, in the vice president's office. Agents examined computers and interviewed current and former vice presidential aides Thursday, according to a law enforcement official who spoke on condition of ano- nymity because the investigation is ongoing. FBI spokesman Rich Kolko would not confirm details of the investigation, but he said, "In the course of a logi- cal investigation, the FBI will research the subject's entire career for whenever he had access to classified or sensitive information to see whether any illegal or improper activity took place." Meantime, Estrada told The Washington Post. that he received a three-page internal U.S. analysis of political developments in his country from Aragoncillo. He did not remember the date, but said he received the document when Aragoncillo came to see him sometime after his January 2001 ouster. "This document was about the graft and corruption hap- pening in the country. It's nothing new," Estrada said. Estrada called Aragoncillo a friend and said he first met AP PHOTO Jerry McClearen, a worker at Desmond Marine in Port Huron, cleans the bottom of a powerboat with a high-pressure wand yesterday in preparation for the winter. AP PHOTO Vice President Dick Cheney makes remarks at the annual meeting of the Association of the U.S. Army Wednesday in Washington. him during a visit to the White House late in President Clin- ton's second term when the former Marine was working on Gore's security detail. Estrada also said he had a close relationship with Aquino but said they had not been in contact in recent years and that he had not received information from Aquino during that period. A Philippine opposition senator has acknowledged receiving information from Aquino. Sen. Panfilo Lacson, a former national police chief under whom Aquino served, said he and "many others" received information passed by Aquino, but he played down the value of the reports, describing them as "shallow information." White House and Justice Department officials declined to comment on the investigation. Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) a former federal prose- cutor who handled an FBI spy case, said the Aragoncil- lo case raises questions about easy access to classified materials and how long the naturalized U.S. citizen was able to pass on sensitive information before he was stopped. "If the complaint is accurate, there is a wealth of evidence which makes it all the more surprising he went undiscov- ered as long as he did, because it was not a very sophisti- cated operation," Schiff said. Aragoncillo was hired to work at Fort Monmouth in July 2004 and began sending classified information and documents in January, often via e-mail, according to an FBI complaint made public last month. The documents' contents have not been made public. From May to Aug. 15 of this year, he printed or down- loaded 101 classified documents relating to the Philippines, of which 37 were classified "secret," according to the crimi- nal complaint. He sent some of the material to Aquino, the complaint said. Aragoncillo's public defender, Chester Keller, declined to say if his client was cooperating with investigators. "It's just too sensitive right now," Keller said. b Senate OKs $50 billion for * resident's war effort WASHINGTON (AP) - The Sen- ate is ready to give President Bush $50 billion more for wars even as public support for the Iraq fighting slips, U.S. casualties climb and Con- gress grows increasingly frustrated with the direction of the conflict. Part of a $445 billion military spending bill for the budget year that began Oct. 1, the war money would pay for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan and push funding for wars since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, beyond $350 billion. Senate GOP leaders had hoped to vote on the bill Thursday so they could adjourn for a 10-day recess, but Sen. Mary Landrieu forced a one-day delay. The Louisiana Democrat spent much of the evening arguing that the Senate, before leaving Washing- ton, should allow $1 billion already approved for Hurricane Katrina relief to be spent on public employee salaries. Landrieu said the first vote upon the Senate's return should be on redirecting an additional $14 bil- lion for education, health care and small business relief. "I know times are tough in Bagh- dad. But times are tough in the Gulf Coast," Landrieu said. "Our war is right here at home. Our war is right here in the Gulf Coast." Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) said he supported Landrieu's "wish list," but did not believe Congress can enact it before its break. The Senate, however, is expected to vote on the defense bill before adjourning. The bill provides $5 bil- lion more for wars than the House version, but the final bill is expected raise for the military and increased benefits for troops. But the bills dif- fer in other areas. Bucking the White House, the Senate on Wednesday approved an amendment sponsored by Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) to ban cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment or punishment against anyone in U.S. government custody. The amend- ment also would standardize how service members detain and interro- gate terrorism suspects. McCain was a prisoner of war in Vietnam. Bush administration officials say the provision would limit the president's authority and flexibility, and the White House says advis- ers would recommend a veto of the entire spending bill if it includes provisions that would hurt efforts in the war on terror. On Thursday, White House spokesman Scott McClellan said that some of the wording about detainees was unnecessary and duplicative and that the administration hoped to press the concerns with congressio- nal negotiators. Support for the provision in the GOP-controlled House is unclear. The Senate action shows that members of the president's own party are concerned about his war- time policies. Their worries reflect those of their skeptical constituents. Opinion polls show declining sup- port for the war in Iraq, which has claimed more than 1,940 members of the U.S. military. The Congressional Research Service, which writes reports for lawmakers, says the Pentagon is spending about $6 billion a month for Iraq and $1 billion for Afghani- stan, and war costs could total $570 billion by the end of 2010, assuming troops are gradually brought home. CRS analysts say that since the Sept. 11 attacks, Congress has given the president about $311 billion for combat and reconstruction in Iraq and Afghanistan and securing U.S. bases. About $280 billion has gone to the Pentagon, while $31 billion has been provided for foreign and diplomatic operations. Excluding the $50 billion in new money, the Senate bill totals $395 billion _ about $2 billion less than what the president had requested for the Defense Department. ABUSIVE LANDLORD? LET US KNOW. NEWS@MICHIGANDAILY.COM New, in Ann Arbor!. THRIFT STORE Grand Opening Sat. Oct. 22