to needle trump research in bid clinton piles up · hillary clinton’s advisers are talking to...

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C M Y K Nxxx,2016-08-30,A,001,Bs-4C,E2 Today, plenty of sun, not as hot, low humidity, high 85. Tonight, clear, low 70. Tomorrow, times of clouds and sun, hot, more humid, high 88. Weather map appears on Page A18. VOL. CLXV . . . No. 57,340 © 2016 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 2016 Late Edition $2.50 The millions of people who fol- low Kim Kardashian West and her sisters on social media have be- come accustomed to seeing them praise everything from fat-burn- ing tea to gummy vitamins for healthier hair. “Ever since I started taking two @sugarbearhair a day, my hair has been fuller and stronger than ever!! Even with all the heat and bleaching I do to it!” Khloé Kar- dashian posted on Instagram this month. But in the last week, close watchers of the sisters’ accounts may have noticed a small addition to those laudatory messages about the latest miracle product: “#ad.” For marketers contending with consumers who use ad blockers online and have cut the cord to their TVs in favor of streaming services, social media has become a way to reach an elusive audi- ence. Brands such as Jack in the Box and Red Bull have proved willing to pay thousands of dollars per social media mention to peo- ple like the Kardashians and other so-called influencers who com- mand big, loyal followings on services like Instagram, Snapchat and YouTube. These mentions, however, are often presented as testimonials Endorsed by a Kardashian, But Is It Love or Just an Ad? By SAPNA MAHESHWARI Continued on Page B4 In its latest move to quell out- rage over its price increases, the maker of the EpiPen has resorted to an unusual tactic — introducing a generic version of its own prod- uct. The company, Mylan, said on Monday that the generic EpiPen would be identical to the existing product, which is used to treat se- vere allergic reactions. But it will have a wholesale list price of $300 for a pack of two, half the price of the brand-name EpiPen. The raging debate over EpiPen pricing has offered a surprisingly wide window into the complicated world of prescription drug pric- ing, in which powerful drug com- panies, pharmacy benefit manag- ers, insurers and federal health programs all play major roles. However, the system remains opaque. Last week, the company an- nounced steps to increase the fi- nancial assistance for the branded EpiPen, for both commercially in- sured and uninsured patients. Those measures, however, did not stem the public furor, in part be- cause the company kept the list price the same. So now, the com- pany will essentially sell the same product under two names at two price points, in competition with each other. The new move did not mollify critics, either. Some noted that even at $300, the generic would still be triple the price of the EpiPen in 2007, when Mylan ac- quired the product and began steadily raising its price. The in- creases have accelerated in re- cent years. Even the generic, ex- pected to be available in several weeks, should provide a nice prof- it to Mylan because its manufac- turing costs are believed to be far less than $300. Several consumer advocacy groups, unhappy with Mylan’s handling of the drug’s pricing, said that on Tuesday they would deliver petitions signed by over 600,000 people to the company’s American corporate headquar- ters in Canonsburg, Pa. In addi- tion, the House Committee on Oversight and Government Re- form said that it had started an in- vestigation and had asked the company for information about the product. Mylan Tries to Silence Outrage By Offering a Generic EpiPen By ANDREW POLLACK Continued on Page B4 U(D54G1D)y+%!.!$!=!] From the roof of a building near the Atlantic Terminal transit hub in Brooklyn, the formerly expan- sive views of Manhattan are now blocked by a rising forest of tow- ers, radiating off Flatbush Ave- nue. The sign for Junior’s restau- rant, once impossible to miss, can be glimpsed only between the new construction. There are 19 residential towers either under construction or re- cently completed along the 10- block section of Flatbush stretch- ing from Barclays Center north to Myrtle Avenue. When all of them are finished, they will have added more than 6,500 apartments — overwhelmingly rentals — to New York City’s housing stock. An- other four buildings on Myrtle Av- enue will add almost 1,000 more units. There are so many new apart- ments in the neighborhood — roughly one-fifth of all rental units expected to become available in the city in 2016 and 2017, according to Nancy Packes Data Services, a research firm — that the Brooklyn rental market seems poised to zoom right past boom, to glut. “The market is saturated,” said Sofia Estevez, executive vice president at the developer TF Cor- nerstone, which will begin offer- ing apartments in a 25-story, 714- Rental Glut Feared as Towers Crowd the Brooklyn Skyline By CHARLES V. BAGLI Continued on Page A19 PARAMOUNT PICTURES, VIA PHOTOFEST The actor, who turned eccentricity into comedy in films like “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory,” was 83. Page B9. Gene Wilder, Comic of the Neurotic, Is Dead Hillary Clinton’s advisers are talking to Donald J. Trump’s ghostwriter of “The Art of the Deal,” seeking insights about Mr. Trump’s deepest insecurities as they devise strategies to needle and undermine him in four weeks at the first presidential debate, the most anticipated in a generation. Her team is also getting advice from psychology experts to help create a personality profile of Mr. Trump to gauge how he may re- spond to attacks and deal with a woman as his sole adversary on the debate stage. They are undertaking a foren- sic-style analysis of Mr. Trump’s performances in the Republican primary debates, cataloging strengths and weaknesses as well as trigger points that caused him to lash out in less-than-presiden- tial ways. As Mrs. Clinton pores over this voluminous research with her de- bate team, most recently for sev- eral hours on Friday, and her aides continue searching for someone who can rattle her as a Trump stand-in during mock debates, Mr. Trump is taking the opposite tack. Though he spent hours with his debate team the last two Sundays, the sessions were more free- wheeling than focused, and he can barely conceal his disdain for la- borious and theatrical practice sessions. “I believe you can prep too much for those things,” Mr. Trump said in an interview last week. “It can be dangerous. You can sound scripted or phony — like you’re trying to be someone you’re not.” Rarely are debate preparations as illuminating about the candi- dates as a debate itself, but Mrs. Clinton’s and Mr. Trump’s strik- ingly different approaches to the Sept. 26 face-off are more reveal- ing about their egos and battle- field instincts than most other mo- ments in the campaign. Mrs. Clinton, a deeply competi- tive debater, wants to crush Mr. Trump on live television, but not with an avalanche of policy de- tails; she is searching for ways to bait him into making blunders. Mr. Trump, a supremely confident CLINTON PILES UP RESEARCH IN BID TO NEEDLE TRUMP PLAN FOR FIRST DEBATE G.O.P. Nominee Avoids a ‘Scripted’ Tone by Practicing Little By PATRICK HEALY and MATT FLEGENHEIMER Continued on Page A15 It was supposed to be a quiet, late-summer weekend on the ex- clusive shores of the Hamptons. But on Sunday, Huma Abedin, the closest aide to Hillary Clinton, re- ceived devastating news. After accompanying Mrs. Clin- ton to fund-raisers, Ms. Abedin learned from her husband, Antho- ny D. Weiner, that The New York Post was about to report that he had again exchanged lewd mes- sages with a woman on social me- dia: the sort of behavior that de- stroyed his congressional career and 2013 mayoral campaign. Only this time, the online indis- cretions included an image of Mr. Weiner’s crotch as he lay next to the couple’s 4-year-old son. Now, Mr. Weiner’s tawdry activ- ities may have claimed his mar- riage — Ms. Abedin told him that she wanted to separate — and have cast another shadow on the adviser and confidante who has been by Mrs. Clinton’s side for the past two dec- ades. Ms. Abe- din was already a major figure this summer in controversies over Mrs. Clin- ton’s handling of classified infor- mation as secretary of state and over ties between the Clinton fam- ily foundation and Mrs. Clinton’s State Department. Mr. Weiner’s extramarital be- havior also threatens to remind voters about the troubles in the Clintons’ own marriage over the decades, including Mrs. Clinton’s much-debated decision to remain with then-President Bill Clinton after revelations of his relation- ship with Monica Lewinsky. Ms. Abedin’s choice to separate from her husband evokes the debates that erupted over Mrs. Clinton’s handling of the Lewinsky affair, a scandal her campaign wants left in the past. Clinton advisers expressed on- ly sympathy for Ms. Abedin on Monday and said they were confi- dent Mr. Weiner’s actions would not hurt Mrs. Clinton, who learned about them from Ms. Abedin and offered support. But Mr. Weiner’s behavior quickly became fodder for Donald J. Trump, Mrs. Clin- ton’s Republican opponent in the presidential race. “Huma is making a very wise Weiner’s Texts Cast Shadow On Campaign Wife, Top Clinton Aide, Decides to Separate By AMY CHOZICK and PATRICK HEALY Huma Abedin Continued on Page A15 EMILIO MORENATTI/ASSOCIATED PRESS Italian Navy and nongovernment ships rescued thousands of migrants, most from Eritrea, on Monday off the coast of Libya. Overboard, to Safety WASHINGTON — In the four years that he ran the Revolution Muslim website out of his walk-up apartment in Flatbush, Brooklyn, Jesse Morton became one of the most prolific recruiters for Al Qaeda, luring numerous Ameri- cans to the group’s violent ideol- ogy. The men and women he in- spired through his online posts and tutorials were accused of plots that included flying a re- mote-controlled plane strapped with explosives into the Pentagon and trying to kill a Swedish car- toonist who satirized the Prophet Muhammad. One of his collabora- tors was killed in a drone strike in Yemen, where he had joined Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Several are now fighting for the Is- lamic State. “We were looking for the lions,” he said, explaining how he would often recruit right outside mosques, “and left them the lambs.” Mr. Morton, 37, is now at the forefront of an experiment to counter the pull of groups like the Islamic State and Al Qaeda. After a stint as an F.B.I. informant and his release from prison last year, Mr. Morton has been hired as a fel- low at George Washington Uni- versity’s Program on Extremism, where he will research the very ideology he once spread. Although countries like Britain have for years been putting for- mer extremists to work in think tanks to provide authentic voices against radical ideology, Mr. Mor- ton is the first former jihadist to step into this public a role in the A Onetime Qaeda Recruiter Turns His Voice Against Jihad By RUKMINI CALLIMACHI Jesse Morton, 37, once ran the Revolution Muslim website. AL DRAGO/THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A12 Across Mexico, fans held spontaneous vigils and celebrations to pay tribute to the singer-songwriter Juan Gabriel, who died on Sunday. PAGE A4 INTERNATIONAL A4-10 His Songs in Their Hearts The Affordable Care Act, which was supposed to make it easy to shop for health insurance, faces a host of chal- lenges. The Upshot. PAGE B1 BUSINESS DAY B1-8 Obstacles for Health Law Mike Love’s “Good Vibrations,” a mem- oir by the Beach Boys frontman, blends insider anecdotes with accusatory one-upmanship. A review. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-6 Surf Tunes and Score-Settling David Brooks PAGE A21 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21 A project to keep water out of damaged buildings at the devastated nuclear power plant in Japan is ambitious. And it may not work. PAGE D1 SCIENCE TIMES D1-6 Fukushima’s Wall of Ice

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Page 1: TO NEEDLE TRUMP RESEARCH IN BID CLINTON PILES UP · Hillary Clinton’s advisers are talking to Donald J. Trump’s ghostwriter of “The Art of the Deal,” seeking insights about

C M Y K Nxxx,2016-08-30,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

Today, plenty of sun, not as hot, lowhumidity, high 85. Tonight, clear, low70. Tomorrow, times of clouds andsun, hot, more humid, high 88.Weather map appears on Page A18.

VOL. CLXV . . . No. 57,340 © 2016 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 2016

Late Edition

$2.50

The millions of people who fol-low Kim Kardashian West and hersisters on social media have be-come accustomed to seeing thempraise everything from fat-burn-ing tea to gummy vitamins forhealthier hair.

“Ever since I started taking two@sugarbearhair a day, my hairhas been fuller and stronger thanever!! Even with all the heat andbleaching I do to it!” Khloé Kar-dashian posted on Instagram thismonth.

But in the last week, closewatchers of the sisters’ accountsmay have noticed a small additionto those laudatory messagesabout the latest miracle product:

“#ad.”For marketers contending with

consumers who use ad blockersonline and have cut the cord totheir TVs in favor of streamingservices, social media has becomea way to reach an elusive audi-ence. Brands such as Jack in theBox and Red Bull have provedwilling to pay thousands of dollarsper social media mention to peo-ple like the Kardashians and otherso-called influencers who com-mand big, loyal followings onservices like Instagram, Snapchatand YouTube.

These mentions, however, areoften presented as testimonials

Endorsed by a Kardashian,But Is It Love or Just an Ad?

By SAPNA MAHESHWARI

Continued on Page B4

In its latest move to quell out-rage over its price increases, themaker of the EpiPen has resortedto an unusual tactic — introducinga generic version of its own prod-uct.

The company, Mylan, said onMonday that the generic EpiPenwould be identical to the existingproduct, which is used to treat se-vere allergic reactions. But it willhave a wholesale list price of $300for a pack of two, half the price ofthe brand-name EpiPen.

The raging debate over EpiPenpricing has offered a surprisinglywide window into the complicatedworld of prescription drug pric-ing, in which powerful drug com-panies, pharmacy benefit manag-ers, insurers and federal healthprograms all play major roles.However, the system remainsopaque.

Last week, the company an-nounced steps to increase the fi-nancial assistance for the brandedEpiPen, for both commercially in-sured and uninsured patients.Those measures, however, did notstem the public furor, in part be-cause the company kept the listprice the same. So now, the com-

pany will essentially sell the sameproduct under two names at twoprice points, in competition witheach other.

The new move did not mollifycritics, either. Some noted thateven at $300, the generic wouldstill be triple the price of theEpiPen in 2007, when Mylan ac-quired the product and begansteadily raising its price. The in-creases have accelerated in re-cent years. Even the generic, ex-pected to be available in severalweeks, should provide a nice prof-it to Mylan because its manufac-turing costs are believed to be farless than $300.

Several consumer advocacygroups, unhappy with Mylan’shandling of the drug’s pricing,said that on Tuesday they woulddeliver petitions signed by over600,000 people to the company’sAmerican corporate headquar-ters in Canonsburg, Pa. In addi-tion, the House Committee onOversight and Government Re-form said that it had started an in-vestigation and had asked thecompany for information aboutthe product.

Mylan Tries to Silence Outrage By Offering a Generic EpiPen

By ANDREW POLLACK

Continued on Page B4

U(D54G1D)y+%!.!$!=!]

From the roof of a building nearthe Atlantic Terminal transit hubin Brooklyn, the formerly expan-sive views of Manhattan are nowblocked by a rising forest of tow-ers, radiating off Flatbush Ave-nue. The sign for Junior’s restau-rant, once impossible to miss, canbe glimpsed only between the newconstruction.

There are 19 residential towerseither under construction or re-cently completed along the 10-block section of Flatbush stretch-ing from Barclays Center north toMyrtle Avenue. When all of themare finished, they will have addedmore than 6,500 apartments —overwhelmingly rentals — to New

York City’s housing stock. An-other four buildings on Myrtle Av-enue will add almost 1,000 moreunits.

There are so many new apart-ments in the neighborhood —roughly one-fifth of all rental unitsexpected to become available inthe city in 2016 and 2017, accordingto Nancy Packes Data Services, aresearch firm — that the Brooklynrental market seems poised tozoom right past boom, to glut.

“The market is saturated,” saidSofia Estevez, executive vicepresident at the developer TF Cor-nerstone, which will begin offer-ing apartments in a 25-story, 714-

Rental Glut Feared as TowersCrowd the Brooklyn Skyline

By CHARLES V. BAGLI

Continued on Page A19

PARAMOUNT PICTURES, VIA PHOTOFEST

The actor, who turned eccentricity into comedy in films like“Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory,” was 83. Page B9.

Gene Wilder, Comic of the Neurotic, Is Dead

Hillary Clinton’s advisers aretalking to Donald J. Trump’sghostwriter of “The Art of theDeal,” seeking insights about Mr.Trump’s deepest insecurities asthey devise strategies to needleand undermine him in four weeksat the first presidential debate, themost anticipated in a generation.

Her team is also getting advicefrom psychology experts to helpcreate a personality profile of Mr.Trump to gauge how he may re-spond to attacks and deal with awoman as his sole adversary onthe debate stage.

They are undertaking a foren-sic-style analysis of Mr. Trump’sperformances in the Republicanprimary debates, catalogingstrengths and weaknesses as wellas trigger points that caused himto lash out in less-than-presiden-tial ways.

As Mrs. Clinton pores over thisvoluminous research with her de-bate team, most recently for sev-eral hours on Friday, and her aidescontinue searching for someonewho can rattle her as a Trumpstand-in during mock debates, Mr.Trump is taking the opposite tack.Though he spent hours with hisdebate team the last two Sundays,the sessions were more free-wheeling than focused, and he canbarely conceal his disdain for la-borious and theatrical practicesessions.

“I believe you can prep toomuch for those things,” Mr. Trumpsaid in an interview last week. “Itcan be dangerous. You can soundscripted or phony — like you’retrying to be someone you’re not.”

Rarely are debate preparationsas illuminating about the candi-dates as a debate itself, but Mrs.Clinton’s and Mr. Trump’s strik-ingly different approaches to theSept. 26 face-off are more reveal-ing about their egos and battle-field instincts than most other mo-ments in the campaign.

Mrs. Clinton, a deeply competi-tive debater, wants to crush Mr.Trump on live television, but notwith an avalanche of policy de-tails; she is searching for ways tobait him into making blunders. Mr.Trump, a supremely confident

CLINTON PILES UPRESEARCH IN BIDTO NEEDLE TRUMP

PLAN FOR FIRST DEBATE

G.O.P. Nominee Avoidsa ‘Scripted’ Tone by

Practicing Little

By PATRICK HEALYand MATT FLEGENHEIMER

Continued on Page A15

It was supposed to be a quiet,late-summer weekend on the ex-clusive shores of the Hamptons.But on Sunday, Huma Abedin, theclosest aide to Hillary Clinton, re-ceived devastating news.

After accompanying Mrs. Clin-ton to fund-raisers, Ms. Abedinlearned from her husband, Antho-ny D. Weiner, that The New YorkPost was about to report that hehad again exchanged lewd mes-sages with a woman on social me-dia: the sort of behavior that de-stroyed his congressional careerand 2013 mayoral campaign.

Only this time, the online indis-cretions included an image of Mr.Weiner’s crotch as he lay next tothe couple’s 4-year-old son.

Now, Mr. Weiner’s tawdry activ-ities may have claimed his mar-riage — Ms. Abedin told him thatshe wanted to separate — andhave cast another shadow on theadviser and confidante who hasbeen by Mrs.Clinton’s side forthe past two dec-ades. Ms. Abe-din was alreadya major figurethis summer incontroversiesover Mrs. Clin-ton’s handling ofclassified infor-mation as secretary of state andover ties between the Clinton fam-ily foundation and Mrs. Clinton’sState Department.

Mr. Weiner’s extramarital be-havior also threatens to remindvoters about the troubles in theClintons’ own marriage over thedecades, including Mrs. Clinton’smuch-debated decision to remainwith then-President Bill Clintonafter revelations of his relation-ship with Monica Lewinsky. Ms.Abedin’s choice to separate fromher husband evokes the debatesthat erupted over Mrs. Clinton’shandling of the Lewinsky affair, ascandal her campaign wants leftin the past.

Clinton advisers expressed on-ly sympathy for Ms. Abedin onMonday and said they were confi-dent Mr. Weiner’s actions wouldnot hurt Mrs. Clinton, who learnedabout them from Ms. Abedin andoffered support. But Mr. Weiner’sbehavior quickly became fodderfor Donald J. Trump, Mrs. Clin-ton’s Republican opponent in thepresidential race.

“Huma is making a very wise

Weiner’s Texts Cast ShadowOn Campaign

Wife, Top Clinton Aide,Decides to Separate

By AMY CHOZICKand PATRICK HEALY

Huma Abedin

Continued on Page A15

EMILIO MORENATTI/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Italian Navy and nongovernment ships rescued thousands of migrants, most from Eritrea, on Monday off the coast of Libya.Overboard, to Safety

WASHINGTON — In the fouryears that he ran the RevolutionMuslim website out of his walk-upapartment in Flatbush, Brooklyn,Jesse Morton became one of themost prolific recruiters for AlQaeda, luring numerous Ameri-cans to the group’s violent ideol-ogy.

The men and women he in-spired through his online postsand tutorials were accused ofplots that included flying a re-mote-controlled plane strapped

with explosives into the Pentagonand trying to kill a Swedish car-toonist who satirized the ProphetMuhammad. One of his collabora-tors was killed in a drone strike inYemen, where he had joined AlQaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.Several are now fighting for the Is-lamic State.

“We were looking for the lions,”he said, explaining how he wouldoften recruit right outsidemosques, “and left them thelambs.”

Mr. Morton, 37, is now at theforefront of an experiment tocounter the pull of groups like theIslamic State and Al Qaeda. Aftera stint as an F.B.I. informant andhis release from prison last year,Mr. Morton has been hired as a fel-low at George Washington Uni-versity’s Program on Extremism,where he will research the veryideology he once spread.

Although countries like Britainhave for years been putting for-mer extremists to work in thinktanks to provide authentic voicesagainst radical ideology, Mr. Mor-ton is the first former jihadist tostep into this public a role in the

A Onetime Qaeda RecruiterTurns His Voice Against Jihad

By RUKMINI CALLIMACHI

Jesse Morton, 37, once ran theRevolution Muslim website.

AL DRAGO/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A12

Across Mexico, fans held spontaneousvigils and celebrations to pay tribute tothe singer-songwriter Juan Gabriel,who died on Sunday. PAGE A4

INTERNATIONAL A4-10

His Songs in Their HeartsThe Affordable Care Act, which wassupposed to make it easy to shop forhealth insurance, faces a host of chal-lenges. The Upshot. PAGE B1

BUSINESS DAY B1-8

Obstacles for Health LawMike Love’s “Good Vibrations,” a mem-oir by the Beach Boys frontman, blendsinsider anecdotes with accusatoryone-upmanship. A review. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-6

Surf Tunes and Score-Settling David Brooks PAGE A21

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21

A project to keep water out of damagedbuildings at the devastated nuclearpower plant in Japan is ambitious. Andit may not work. PAGE D1

SCIENCE TIMES D1-6

Fukushima’s Wall of Ice