arena:sochi 2014 howstarsovercomeflawsonline.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/pageone...slot...

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YELLOW ****** FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2014 ~ VOL. CCLXIII NO. 31 WSJ.com HHHH $2.00 As the Winter Olympics Open, Putin Showcases a Defiant Russia GRAND AMBITION A jury found Mathew Mar- toma guilty of insider trading Thursday, handing prosecutors their eighth win against someone who worked at SAC Capital Advi- sors LP and possibly bolstering a related case against firm founder Steven A. Cohen. Prosecutors have long pur- sued Mr. Cohen, who built one of the country’s most successful hedge funds over the past two decades and managed more than $15 billion at the firm’s peak. He has denied involvement in any wrongdoing and hasn’t been charged criminally, but he faces a civil allegation by the Securi- ties and Exchange Commission that he failed to adequately su- pervise two senior employees at his firm. Both of those men, Mr. Mar- toma and Michael Steinberg, have now been convicted on criminal charges. Mr. Martoma, 39 years old, was found guilty Thursday of taking part in what prosecutors say was one of the largest insider-trading schemes ever—illegal trades on two phar- maceutical companies that helped SAC and its traders book profits and avoid losses worth a total of $275 million. Those dual convictions could hurt Mr. Cohen’s defense. The trades at the heart of Mr. Mar- toma’s case, for instance, are some of the same ones the SEC Please turn to the next page BY CHRISTOPHER M. MATTHEWS AND JOHN CARREYROU Ex-SAC Trader Found Guilty House Speaker John Boehner squashed growing expectations that Congress would rewrite im- migration laws this year—dealing a setback to the White House, a swath of U.S. businesses and a bloc of fellow Republicans seek- ing to improve their party’s chances with Hispanic voters. Rank-and-file Republicans have voiced few complaints about the GOP’s latest ideas for an im- migration overhaul, which in- clude some legal status for most of the 11.5 million people in the U.S. illegally. But many balked at debating an issue that divides Re- publicans and feared giving the president a legislative victory in an election year. Some suggested pushing the issue to 2015, when Republicans might have control of the Senate and more leverage. Many in GOP ranks also ex- pressed distrust that President Barack Obama would enforce any law they pass. “There’s wide- spread doubt about whether this administration can be trusted to enforce our laws,” Mr. Boehner told reporters. “It’s going to be difficult to move any immigration legislation until that changes.” The White House responded that it has aggressively enforced immigration laws. The move represents an effort by Mr. Boehner to apply the brakes amid heightened expecta- tions after the GOP unveiled its ideas last week at a retreat in Maryland. It still remains possi- ble he could bring legislation to the floor this summer, after many Republican primaries are over, or late in the year, after the elec- tions. Ali Noorani, who heads a pro- immigration coalition of reli- gious, law-enforcement and busi- ness leaders, said he was told by congressional aides to “take a Please turn to page A4 BY LAURA MECKLER AND KRISTINA PETERSON Immigration Overhaul Stalls Boehner Applies Brakes as GOP Moves to Avoid Divisive Fight Over Obama Priority SOCHI, Russia—On Friday night, Russian President Vladimir Putin will entertain world leaders at a reception under soaring, Corin- thian-style columns and a giant, sparkling chandelier in the Atrium ballroom of the Sta- lin-era Rus Sanatorium. It will be one of the most exclusive events of the Winter Olympics here, but Mr. Putin’s guest list has some big gaps. Few of the Western world’s most prominent leaders will be there, declining entreaties to attend, ac- cording to diplomats and government offi- cials. Instead, Russia’s president will be sur- rounded by Chinese President Xi Jinping, Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych and Belarus President Aleksandr Lukashenko. North Korea is sending its second-highest of- ficial, even though the country has no ath- letes competing at the Sochi Games. The 61-year-old Mr. Putin landed the first Winter Olympics ever hosted by Russia in 2007 with a charm offensive that included wowing International Olympic Committee of- ficials at a meeting in Guatemala City with a speech in English and French, the two official languages of the Olympics. But the lack of top U.S. and European offi- cials at Mr. Putin’s fancy reception and the 17-day Sochi Games shows hostility to the new political creed Mr. Putin has pursued since his return to the Kremlin in 2012. In his third term as president, the former KGB of- ficer has crusaded against Western influence throughout the world and emphasized Rus- sia’s “traditional values,” a contrast to his earlier efforts to draw Russia closer to the U.S. and Europe. In foreign policy, the move has shaped the Kremlin’s resistance to Western efforts to use human-rights violations as justification for intervention in Syria’s civil war and other conflicts. Mr. Putin’s ability to help stave off U.S. strikes against Syrian President Bashar Please turn to page A10 BY GREGORY L. WHITE AND PAUL SONNE WASHINGTON—The Pentagon has dropped a plan to retire one of its nuclear-powered aircraft carriers after the White House intervened to head off a brewing political fight. The military had proposed an early retirement of the USS George Washington, reducing the U.S. carrier fleet to 10, as part of plan to deal with cost cuts imposed by Congress. That touched a nerve among a bipar- tisan group of lawmakers, who called on Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel in a letter last week to block the move and preserve what they argued is a potent symbol of American power. The behind-the-scenes battle illustrates how politics often complicates the task of wringing savings from the U.S. military budget. Lawmakers, facing pres- sures from defense contractors and local communities, often op- pose proposed cuts to military bases, aircraft and shipbuilding programs and weapons systems. Last year, a strategic review by Mr. Hagel on the impact of the mandated across-the-board spending cuts found the U.S. could reduce the carrier fleet to eight or nine—still enough to equal the number of carriers op- erated world-wide by seven other nations. But as the controversy began to build about taking the first step in that process, it became clear that any proposal endorsed by the White House to retire an aircraft carrier likely would have been blocked by Congress, open- ing Democrats to election-year criticism, officials familiar with the discussions said. White House officials headed off the issue by telling defense officials in recent days that they would provide extra money—in effect raising the military’s pro- posed budget—to allow the Navy to extend the life of the George Washington, commissioned on Please turn to page A4 BY JULIAN E. BARNES Pentagon Drops Plan To Mothball A Carrier LAS VEGAS—Forget Britney Spears and Cirque du Soleil. For many gamblers, the hottest at- traction in Sin City is an out- dated three-reel slot machine that hasn’t produced a jackpot in nearly two decades. It is called the Lion’s Share, and in this city with no short- age of losing bets, the 20-year-old slot has at- tracted a legion of ever-hopeful devotees on the floor of the MGM Grand, the Strip’s second-biggest casino. The machine’s mi- serly track record may, paradoxically, make it the rarest of all Vegas treats: A decent bet. A genera- tion of players has already lost money on it, helping more than double the progressive jackpot to an improbable $2.3 million. “You see the sharks swim- ming around, scoping you out,” said Washington state resident Lief Anderson. The 64-year-old is a second-generation Lion’s Share player: He took over the family quest from his late father 10 years ago. According to long-established slot etiquette, the seat is first-come, first- serve, and the player can stick around until he is exhausted or out of money—or both. On a $3 maximum bet (the machine takes $1 and $2 bets, too) a player can earn up to $10,000 without hitting the jackpot, and small hits can keep someone in his vinyl seat for many hours. At 23, Justin Paulus is barely older than the machine is, but the engineer is so com- mitted to taking his shot that he fell asleep at it repeatedly dur- ing a six-hour overnight session Please turn to page A8 BY ROB COPELAND Vegas’s Biggest Headliner Is Outdated and Very Mechanical i i i Gamblers Keep a Vigil on Aging Slot Machine They Expect to Disgorge $2.3 Million Soon Lion’s Share slot machine DJIA 15628.53 À 188.30 1.2% NASDAQ 4057.12 À 1.1% NIKKEI 14155.12 g 0.2% STOXX 600 322.77 À 1.5% 10-YR. TREAS. g 9/32 , yield 2.702% OIL $97.84 À $0.46 GOLD $1,257.60 À $0.30 EURO $1.3590 YEN 102.12 ARENA: SOCHI 2014 How Stars Overcome Flaws MANSION Small Homes That Live Large CONTENTS Business Tech............ B5 Corporate News.... B1-3 Global Finance............ C3 Heard on Street........ C8 In the Markets........... C4 Markets Dashboard C5 Movies ....................... D6-8 Opinion................... A11-13 Sports.......................... D1-5 Television............. D10-11 U.S. News................. A2-5 Weather Watch........ B6 World News ........... A6-9 s Copyright 2014 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved > What’s News i i i World-Wide n Boehner squashed expec- tations that Congress would overhaul immigration laws this year, an issue that has divided Republicans. A1 n The U.S. imposed new en- forcement actions against firms with ties to Iran, as Congress pushed for a tougher posture ahead of nuclear talks. A6 n Iran has let al Qaeda facili- tate the movement of Sunni fighters into Syria, the U.S. said. Tehran denied the charges. A6 n Syria agreed to let civilians leave the besieged center of Homs, followed by food deliv- eries to those who remain. A7 n The Pentagon dropped a plan to retire one of its air- craft carriers after the White House intervened. A1 n Lawmakers reached a deal on a five-year plan to change how physicians are paid for treating Medicare patients. A4 n The federal government is scaling back the role of USIS, which carried out the flawed Snowden background check. A4 n Pakistan’s government and a Pakistani Taliban-nominated panel met for the first time in a bid to open peace talks. A9 n Congressional leaders are pushing to impose federal stan- dards for protecting the electric grid from physical attacks. B3 n Controlling hypertension and other pregnancy-related factors can reduce a woman’s risk of stroke, a study said. A3 n Turkey’s parliament passed a bill to let officials shut web- sites without a court ruling. A7 n Died: Ralph Kiner, 91, base- ball slugger and broadcaster. i i i T he Dow rose 188.30 to 15628.53, its biggest gain of 2014, on upbeat jobless-claims data ahead of the release of the January employment report. C4 Investors swapped out of U.S. equity funds and into bonds at the fastest clip on re- cord in the latest week. C4 n Apple said it has bought $14 billion of its own shares since reporting results that disappointed Wall Street. B1 n Ex-SAC manager Martoma was found guilty of insider trading, another win for pros- ecutors related to the firm. A1 n U.S. exports fell in Decem- ber, widening the trade gap to $38.70 billion, but energy sales overseas set a record. A2 n The ECB put markets on alert for possible future rate cuts even as it kept its mone- tary policies unchanged. A8 n High-frequency traders have been paying to get di- rect access to market-mov- ing news releases. C1 n Sony said it would cut 5,000 jobs in its TV and PC businesses and forecast a $1.1 billion loss for fiscal 2014. B1 n Ocwen’s $2.7 billion deal to buy mortgage-servicing rights from Wells Fargo was halted by a New York regulator. C1 n GM’s quarterly net fell 13% on weak results in global oper- ations outside of China. B4 n IBM is looking for a buyer for its semiconductor-manu- facturing operations. B3 n LinkedIn projected lower revenue than analysts expected. Its shares fell 8% after hours. B2 Business & Finance False Note for Japanese ‘Beethoven’ STRANGE TUNE: A musical ghostwriter alleged Thursday that acclaimed Japanese composer Mamoru Samuragochi, thought to be deaf, didn’t compose much of his music and appears to hear normally. D1 AFP/Getty Images U.S. blames Russia for leak of profane call... A6 Criticism of Sochi preparation prompts ‘shower cam’ comment......................................... D2 Eyes on the Prize: Bin Laden Ally Kicks Off Afghan Campaign RUNNING MATE: Former Islamist warlord Abdul Rasoul Sayyaf, center, Thursday launched his run to succeed President Hamid Karzai. See WSJ.com Rahmat Gul/Associated Press C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW038000-6-A00100-10EFFB7178F CL,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NC,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WE BG,BM,CC,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PA,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO P2JW038000-6-A00100-10EFFB7178F

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Page 1: ARENA:SOCHI 2014 HowStarsOvercomeFlawsonline.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/PageOne...slot etiquette,the seat is first-come,first-serve, and the player canstick around until he

YELLOW

* * * * * * FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2014 ~ VOL. CCLXIII NO. 31 WSJ.com HHHH $2 .00

As the Winter Olympics Open,Putin Showcases a Defiant Russia

GRAND AMBITION

A jury found Mathew Mar-toma guilty of insider tradingThursday, handing prosecutorstheir eighth win against someonewho worked at SAC Capital Advi-sors LP and possibly bolstering arelated case against firm founderSteven A. Cohen.

Prosecutors have long pur-sued Mr. Cohen, who built one ofthe country’s most successfulhedge funds over the past twodecades and managed more than$15 billion at the firm’s peak. Hehas denied involvement in anywrongdoing and hasn’t beencharged criminally, but he facesa civil allegation by the Securi-ties and Exchange Commissionthat he failed to adequately su-pervise two senior employees athis firm.

Both of those men, Mr. Mar-toma and Michael Steinberg,have now been convicted oncriminal charges. Mr. Martoma,39 years old, was found guiltyThursday of taking part in whatprosecutors say was one of thelargest insider-trading schemesever—illegal trades on two phar-maceutical companies thathelped SAC and its traders bookprofits and avoid losses worth atotal of $275 million.

Those dual convictions couldhurt Mr. Cohen’s defense. Thetrades at the heart of Mr. Mar-toma’s case, for instance, aresome of the same ones the SEC

Pleaseturntothenextpage

BY CHRISTOPHER M. MATTHEWSAND JOHN CARREYROU

Ex-SACTraderFoundGuilty

House Speaker John Boehnersquashed growing expectationsthat Congress would rewrite im-migration laws this year—dealinga setback to the White House, aswath of U.S. businesses and abloc of fellow Republicans seek-ing to improve their party’schances with Hispanic voters.

Rank-and-file Republicanshave voiced few complaints about

the GOP’s latest ideas for an im-migration overhaul, which in-clude some legal status for mostof the 11.5 million people in theU.S. illegally. But many balked atdebating an issue that divides Re-publicans and feared giving thepresident a legislative victory inan election year. Some suggestedpushing the issue to 2015, whenRepublicans might have controlof the Senate and more leverage.

Many in GOP ranks also ex-pressed distrust that President

Barack Obama would enforce anylaw they pass. “There’s wide-spread doubt about whether thisadministration can be trusted toenforce our laws,” Mr. Boehnertold reporters. “It’s going to bedifficult to move any immigrationlegislation until that changes.”

The White House respondedthat it has aggressively enforcedimmigration laws.

The move represents an effortby Mr. Boehner to apply thebrakes amid heightened expecta-

tions after the GOP unveiled itsideas last week at a retreat inMaryland. It still remains possi-ble he could bring legislation tothe floor this summer, after manyRepublican primaries are over, orlate in the year, after the elec-tions.

Ali Noorani, who heads a pro-immigration coalition of reli-gious, law-enforcement and busi-ness leaders, said he was told bycongressional aides to “take a

PleaseturntopageA4

BY LAURA MECKLERAND KRISTINA PETERSON

Immigration Overhaul StallsBoehner Applies Brakes as GOPMoves to Avoid Divisive Fight Over Obama Priority

SOCHI, Russia—On Friday night, RussianPresident Vladimir Putin will entertain worldleaders at a reception under soaring, Corin-thian-style columns and a giant, sparklingchandelier in the Atrium ballroom of the Sta-lin-era Rus Sanatorium.

It will be one of the most exclusive eventsof the Winter Olympics here, but Mr. Putin’sguest list has some big gaps. Few of theWestern world’s most prominent leaders willbe there, declining entreaties to attend, ac-cording to diplomats and government offi-cials.

Instead, Russia’s president will be sur-rounded by Chinese President Xi Jinping,

Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych andBelarus President Aleksandr Lukashenko.North Korea is sending its second-highest of-ficial, even though the country has no ath-letes competing at the Sochi Games.

The 61-year-old Mr. Putin landed the firstWinter Olympics ever hosted by Russia in2007 with a charm offensive that includedwowing International Olympic Committee of-ficials at a meeting in Guatemala City with aspeech in English and French, the two officiallanguages of the Olympics.

But the lack of top U.S. and European offi-cials at Mr. Putin’s fancy reception and the17-day Sochi Games shows hostility to thenew political creed Mr. Putin has pursuedsince his return to the Kremlin in 2012. In his

third term as president, the former KGB of-ficer has crusaded against Western influencethroughout the world and emphasized Rus-sia’s “traditional values,” a contrast to hisearlier efforts to draw Russia closer to theU.S. and Europe.

In foreign policy, the move has shaped theKremlin’s resistance to Western efforts to usehuman-rights violations as justification forintervention in Syria’s civil war and otherconflicts. Mr. Putin’s ability to help stave offU.S. strikes against Syrian President Bashar

PleaseturntopageA10

BY GREGORY L. WHITE AND PAUL SONNE

WASHINGTON—The Pentagonhas dropped a plan to retire oneof its nuclear-powered aircraftcarriers after the White Houseintervened to head off a brewingpolitical fight.

The military had proposed anearly retirement of the USSGeorge Washington, reducingthe U.S. carrier fleet to 10, aspart of plan to deal with costcuts imposed by Congress. Thattouched a nerve among a bipar-tisan group of lawmakers, whocalled on Defense SecretaryChuck Hagel in a letter last weekto block the move and preservewhat they argued is a potentsymbol of American power.

The behind-the-scenes battleillustrates how politics oftencomplicates the task of wringingsavings from the U.S. militarybudget. Lawmakers, facing pres-sures from defense contractorsand local communities, often op-pose proposed cuts to militarybases, aircraft and shipbuildingprograms and weapons systems.

Last year, a strategic reviewby Mr. Hagel on the impact ofthe mandated across-the-boardspending cuts found the U.S.could reduce the carrier fleet toeight or nine—still enough toequal the number of carriers op-erated world-wide by sevenother nations.

But as the controversy beganto build about taking the firststep in that process, it becameclear that any proposal endorsedby the White House to retire anaircraft carrier likely would havebeen blocked by Congress, open-ing Democrats to election-yearcriticism, officials familiar withthe discussions said.

White House officials headedoff the issue by telling defenseofficials in recent days that theywould provide extra money—ineffect raising the military’s pro-posed budget—to allow the Navyto extend the life of the GeorgeWashington, commissioned on

PleaseturntopageA4

BY JULIAN E. BARNES

PentagonDrops PlanToMothballA Carrier

LAS VEGAS—Forget BritneySpears and Cirque du Soleil. Formany gamblers, the hottest at-traction in Sin City is an out-dated three-reel slot machinethat hasn’t produced a jackpot innearly two decades.

It is called theLion’s Share, and inthis city with no short-age of losing bets, the20-year-old slot has at-tracted a legion ofever-hopeful devoteeson the floor of theMGM Grand, theStrip’s second-biggestcasino.

The machine’s mi-serly track record may,paradoxically, make itthe rarest of all Vegastreats: A decent bet. A genera-tion of players has already lostmoney on it, helping more thandouble the progressive jackpotto an improbable $2.3 million.

“You see the sharks swim-

ming around, scoping you out,”said Washington state residentLief Anderson. The 64-year-oldis a second-generation Lion’sShare player: He took over thefamily quest from his late father10 years ago.

According to long-establishedslot etiquette, the seatis first-come, first-serve, and the playercan stick around untilhe is exhausted or outof money—or both. Ona $3 maximum bet (themachine takes $1 and$2 bets, too) a playercan earn up to $10,000without hitting thejackpot, and small hitscan keep someone inhis vinyl seat for manyhours.

At 23, Justin Paulusis barely older than the machineis, but the engineer is so com-mitted to taking his shot that hefell asleep at it repeatedly dur-ing a six-hour overnight session

PleaseturntopageA8

BY ROB COPELAND

Vegas’s Biggest HeadlinerIs Outdated and Very Mechanical

i i i

Gamblers Keep a Vigil on Aging SlotMachineThey Expect to Disgorge $2.3 Million Soon

Lion’s Shareslot machine

DJIA 15628.53 À 188.30 1.2% NASDAQ 4057.12 À 1.1% NIKKEI 14155.12 g 0.2% STOXX600 322.77 À 1.5% 10-YR. TREAS. g 9/32 , yield 2.702% OIL $97.84 À $0.46 GOLD $1,257.60 À $0.30 EURO $1.3590 YEN 102.12

ARENA: SOCHI 2014

How Stars Overcome FlawsMANSION Small Homes That Live Large

CONTENTSBusiness Tech. ........... B5Corporate News.... B1-3Global Finance............ C3Heard on Street........ C8In the Markets........... C4Markets Dashboard C5

Movies....................... D6-8Opinion................... A11-13Sports.......................... D1-5Television............. D10-11U.S. News................. A2-5Weather Watch........ B6World News........... A6-9

s Copyright 2014 Dow Jones & Company.All Rights Reserved

>

What’sNews

i i i

World-Widen Boehner squashed expec-tations that Congress wouldoverhaul immigration lawsthis year, an issue that hasdivided Republicans. A1nThe U.S. imposed new en-forcement actions against firmswith ties to Iran, as Congresspushed for a tougher postureahead of nuclear talks.A6n Iran has let al Qaeda facili-tate themovement of Sunnifighters into Syria, the U.S. said.Tehran denied the charges.A6n Syria agreed to let civiliansleave the besieged center ofHoms, followed by food deliv-eries to those who remain. A7n The Pentagon dropped aplan to retire one of its air-craft carriers after the WhiteHouse intervened. A1n Lawmakers reached a dealon a five-year plan to changehow physicians are paid fortreating Medicare patients. A4nThe federal government isscaling back the role of USIS,which carried out the flawedSnowden background check.A4n Pakistan’s government anda Pakistani Taliban-nominatedpanel met for the first time ina bid to open peace talks. A9n Congressional leaders arepushing to impose federal stan-dards for protecting the electricgrid from physical attacks. B3nControlling hypertensionand other pregnancy-relatedfactors can reduce a woman’srisk of stroke, a study said. A3nTurkey’s parliament passeda bill to let officials shut web-sites without a court ruling. A7nDied: Ralph Kiner, 91, base-ball slugger and broadcaster.

i i i

TheDow rose 188.30 to15628.53, its biggest gain of

2014, on upbeat jobless-claimsdata ahead of the release of theJanuary employment report. C4 Investors swapped out ofU.S. equity funds and intobonds at the fastest clip on re-cord in the latest week. C4nApple said it has bought$14 billion of its own sharessince reporting results thatdisappointed Wall Street. B1n Ex-SACmanager Martomawas found guilty of insidertrading, another win for pros-ecutors related to the firm. A1nU.S. exports fell in Decem-ber, widening the trade gap to$38.70 billion, but energysales overseas set a record. A2nThe ECB putmarkets onalert for possible future ratecuts even as it kept its mone-tary policies unchanged. A8n High-frequency tradershave been paying to get di-rect access to market-mov-ing news releases. C1n Sony said it would cut5,000 jobs in its TV and PCbusinesses and forecast a $1.1billion loss for fiscal 2014. B1nOcwen’s $2.7 billion deal tobuy mortgage-servicing rightsfromWells Fargo was haltedby a New York regulator. C1nGM’s quarterly net fell 13%on weak results in global oper-ations outside of China. B4n IBM is looking for a buyerfor its semiconductor-manu-facturing operations. B3n LinkedIn projected lowerrevenue than analysts expected.Its shares fell 8% after hours. B2

Business&Finance

False Note for Japanese ‘Beethoven’

STRANGE TUNE: A musical ghostwriter alleged Thursday thatacclaimed Japanese composer Mamoru Samuragochi, thought to be deaf,didn’t compose much of his music and appears to hear normally. D1

AFP

/Getty

Images

U.S. blames Russia for leak of profane call... A6 Criticism of Sochi preparation prompts

‘shower cam’ comment......................................... D2

Eyes on the Prize: Bin Laden Ally Kicks Off Afghan Campaign

RUNNING MATE: Former Islamist warlord Abdul Rasoul Sayyaf, center, Thursday launched his run to succeed President Hamid Karzai. See WSJ.com

Rahm

atGul/A

ssociatedPress

CM Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

P2JW038000-6-A00100-10EFFB7178F CL,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NC,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WEBG,BM,CC,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PA,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO

P2JW038000-6-A00100-10EFFB7178F