1、* SATURDAY/SUNDAY, JUNE 8 - 9, 2019 VOL. CCLXXIII NO. 133 WSJ.com HHHH $5.00 Hot draft pick WS J THEWALLSTREETJOURNALWEEKEND BIGPREY Washingtonishunting forgiantsasantitrust fervorreignitesB1 ment officials and social workers, sev- eral employees said an IHS manager told them not to say anything. Mo
2、nths later, the maintenance man, then 47 years old, was told he was fired over the incidentthen unfired. He returned to work at the Unity Heal- ing Center, a teens-only residential sub- stance-abuse treatment facility, although by then there was a federal investigation into his conduct. His duties i
3、ncluded re- viewing safety incident reports, includ- ing those about sex abuse. The IHS, which provides health care for 2.6 million Native Americans, has al- lowed employees accused of sexual mis- conduct to continue working and has struggled to meet U.S. requirements for reporting such allegations,
4、 a Wall Street CHEROKEE, N.C.When employees at a U.S. Indian Health Service facility here saw a video of their maintenance man disappearing with a 16-year-old patient into a private bathroom, they strongly suspected he was sexually in- volved with her. After two staff members questioned the girl, sh
5、e dragged a chair to the bathroom shower and tried to hang herself from the curtain rod, according to internal documents and people fa- miliar with the September 2016 inci- dent. Although suspected sexual abuse of minors on Indian reservations is sup- posed to be reported to law-enforce- BYCHRISTOPH
6、ERWEAVER AgencySilencedSex-AbuseClaims IndianHealthServicemanagerstoldemployeesnottotalktolawenforcement “You mean, that thing with the brooms?” he says friends asked earlier this year. “Theres a fantasy league for that?” Fantasy sportsin which competitors draft virtual teams that rise and fall on p
7、oints awarded according to the statistics of real-life play- ershas mushroomed into a national pastime riding on tra- ditional American sports like football and baseball. While millions are prepar- ing to spend the summer ad- justing imaginary pitching lineups or scouting an under- valued shortstop,
8、 a fantasy fringe will be gauging how PleaseturntopageA9 They were settling into this years baseball season, looking toward the World Series. His fantasy sport is curling, and the fateful tournament was Humptys Champions Cup in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Scott Chu prepared for his fantasy sports leagu
9、es big event with a bold strategy: Combine a champ with an un- derdog. He studied the stats and built his lineup with members of a team that won a top con- test last yearand members from one with remote chances. But at the big game this spring, his blend of teams failed him“never quite came together
10、,” says the 30-year-old commercial-loan specialist from Portage, Mich. And Mr. Chu still had to put up with his bewildered buddies. BYIRAIOSEBASHVILI Yes,TheresaFantasyLeagueforThat,Too iii Fanscreatevirtuallineupsinsumowrestling,bird-watching,curling EXCHANGE Journal investigation found. At Chero-
11、kee, no one contacted law enforcement about the maintenance man until about seven months after the incident, and se- nior agency officials didnt intervene. In February, the Journal and the PBS series Frontline reported that IHS pedia- trician Stanley Patrick Weber had sexu- ally assaulted young male
12、 patients, and that the agency ignored warnings and tried to silence whistleblowers over two decades. The day the Journal/Frontline report was published, the IHS an- nounced a written policy to improve its handling of sexual-abuse allegations. Yet in interviews in early April, more than two months a
13、fter the new policy was enacted, employees of the North PleaseturntopageA11 TheLong Roadto TheStudent DebtCrisis REVIEW UbersCEO TakesWheel InExecutive Shake-Up Uber Technologies Inc. Chief Executive Dara Khosrow- shahi is taking direct oversight of the ride-sharing companys operations in a manageme
14、nt shakeout that comes less than a month after a disappointing initial public offering. The CEO told employees on Friday afternoon that he would eliminate the chief op- erating officer position to have more hands-on control over the companys main busi- nesses: ride-hailing and food- delivery. As a r
15、esult, Mr. Khos- rowshahi said one of his longtime colleagues, operating chief Barney Harford, would step down on July 1. The CEO also said he is combining Ubers marketing, communications and policies team into one group “to have a consistent, unified narra- tive” to customers, the media and policy
16、makers. With that, marketing chief Rebecca Mes- sina agreed to leave after just nine months at the company. PleaseturntopageA4 BYELIOTBROWN President Trump on Friday night dropped his threat of tariffs on billions of dollars of Mexican imports after negotia- tors reached a deal on mea- sures to stem
17、 the flow of mi- grants pouring into the U.S. from Mexico, averting a poten- tially devastating trade fight for both countries. ByJoshZumbrun, RebeccaBallhausand RobbieWhelanEmployers tapped the brakes on hiring in May, signaling that companies are taking a more cautious approach at a time of cool-
18、ing global growth and ris- ing trade tensions. A1Theyieldsonbenchmark Treasurys hit new 2019 lows, a sign investors believe economic conditions will spur the Fed to cut rates. A2The Dow notched its best week in over six months, with the blue chips gaining 1% Friday. B1Uberschief is taking di- rect o
19、versight of the firms operations in a manage- ment shakeout that comes after a disappointing IPO. A1FedExisending its air- shipping contract with Am- azon in the U.S., signaling an escalationoftensionsbetween the longtime partners. B3Facebook will no longer allow its apps to come pre- installed on m
20、obile devices made by Huawei. B3Somebigminerssaid over a dozen dams under their authority have at times failed stability assessments.B12Barnes & Noble agreed to be bought by hedge fund Elliott Management for about $475 million. B3KraftHeinzsaid it had concluded an internal in- quiry into issues that
21、 trig- gered a regulatory probe. B3 Whats News CONTENTS Books. C7-12 Design & Decor D8 Food. D6-7 Gear & Gadgets. D9 Heard on Street.B14 Obituaries. A10 Opinion A13-15 Sports A12 Style & Fashion D2-3 Travel D4-5 U.S. News A2-4 Weather. A12 World News. A6-9 s 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights
22、 Reserved T rump dropped his threat of tariffs on bil- lions of dollars of Mexican imports after negotiators reached an agreement on measures to stem the flow of migrants into the U.S. from Mexico. A1Putinaccused the U.S. of using tariffs and sanctions to maintain economic dom- inance, while highlig
23、hting warming ties with China. A6State attorneys general are preparing for their own investigations into big technology platforms such as Google and Facebook. A4The Navy accused Rus- sias military of unsafe op- eration after a Russian de- stroyer came within 100 feet of an American cruiser. A6The Pe
24、ntagon put Tur- key on notice over access to F-35 jets if Ankara makes good on plans to buy a Rus- sian antiaircraft system. A9NASA set out rules to allow affluent adventurers to spend time on the inter- national space station. A3Coloradoschoolofficials are considering demolishing Columbine High Sch
25、ool, citing “morbid fascina- tion” with the campus. A3Britains opposition La- bour Party fended off the upstart, euroskeptic Brexit Party in a by-election. A9 World-Wide Business&Finance NOONAN Overthrowthe PrinceofFacebookA15 OLGA MALTSEVA/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES Russia,ChinaLooktoBolster
26、TiesAmidTensionsWiththeU.S. SIMPATICO: Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian leader Vladimir Putin appeared together Friday at Russias flagship economic forum, where Mr. Putin blasted the Trump administrations use of tariffs while highlighting the Kremlins warming ties with China. A6 Employers ta
27、pped the brakes on hiring in May, sig- naling companies are taking a more cautious approach as trade tensions rise, global growth cools and the decade- long U.S. expansion shows strains. The economy added 75,000 jobs in May, marking the 104th straight month of gains, but also one of the weakest mont
28、hly increases since the recession ended in mid-2009, the Labor Department re- ported Friday. The hiring slowdown was broad-based across industries, and the March and April payroll gains were reduced from previous estimates. A bright spot was the job- less rate, which held steady at 3.6%, a half-cent
29、ury low. The employment figures add to other data depicting an economy that is still growing, PleaseturntopageA2 BYSARAHCHANEY ANDERICMORATH Pace of Hiring Slows Across Economy conclusion of the talks in Washington, Mr. Ebrard said his country would take action to dismantle human-smuggling networks
30、and work more closely with the U.S. to share information about migrants. Mexico will accept the re- turn of more migrants to await the resolution of their U.S. asylum cases, and offer them work permits, education and health services during their time in the country, Mr. Ebrard said. In return, Mr. E
31、brard added, the U.S. would accelerate sev- eral investment and develop- ment programs in Central America and Southern Mexico that were agreed to under a PleaseturntopageA8 National Guard troops. The U.S., meanwhile, said it would immediately expand the implementation of the existing “Migrant Protec
32、tion Protocols” across its entire southern bor- der, returning asylum seekers to Mexico. “Those crossing the U.S. Southern Border to seek asy- lum will be rapidly returned to Mexico where they may await the adjudication of their asy- lum claims,” the statement said, adding that Mexico will authorize
33、 the entrance of all of those individuals for hu- manitarian reasons. Both countries agreed to fi- nalize the terms of additional provisions within 90 days. Speaking to reporters at the delegation including three members of Mexicos cabinet, led by Foreign Minister Mar- celo Ebrard, flew to Washing-
34、ton. A senior White House offi- cial said Messrs. Trump and Ebrard spoke by telephone Fri- day evening, shortly before Mr. Trump announced the deal. A joint statement released by both countries late Friday said that Mexico agreed to in- crease enforcement to curb ir- regular migration, including dep
35、loyment of its newly cre- ated National Guard through- out the country, with a focus on its southern border with Guatemala. On Thursday night, Mexicos Foreign Ministry said it would deploy up to 6,000 Mr. Trump said the tariffs, which had been set to go into effect Monday, were “indefi- nitely suspe
36、nded,” while Mexi- can President Andrs Manuel Lpez Obrador said that, thanks to the support of all Mexicans, “the imposition of tariffs on Mexican products exported to the U.S. have been avoided.” Mr. Lpez Obrador said a rally in Tijuana scheduled for Satur- day would be held as planned to celebrate
37、 the deal. By threatening to apply tar- iffs on the nearly $350 billion a year in imports from Mexico, Mr. Trump prompted a rushed effort from the U.S.s southern neighbor to assuage American concerns about the border be- tween the two countries. A U.S.-MexicoDealAvertsTariffs Accordcomesafter Mexicanofficialsvow strongermeasuresto stemflowofmigrants DontCook. DoThis Instead. OFFDUTYData on jobs push Treasury yields toward 2%. A2每 日 免 费 获 取 报 告 1、每日微信群内分享 7 +最新重磅报告; 2、每日分享当日华尔街日报、金融时报; 3、每周分享经济学人 4、行研报告均为公开版,权利归原作者 所有,起点财经仅分发做内部学习。 扫一扫二维码 关注公号 回复:研究报告 加入“起点财经” 微信群。