refugees from an arctic thaw

1
U(D54G1D)y+\!$!#!#!] the rest of the planet, and the ice cover is retreating at a pace that even the climate scientists who predicted the decline find startling. Much of 2016 was warmer than nor- mal, and the freeze-up came late. In No- vember, the extent of Arctic sea ice hit a record low for the month, largely be- cause over a five-day period the ice cover lost more than 19,000 square miles, a de- cline that the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Colorado called “almost unprecedented” for that time of year. In the southern Beaufort Sea, where only reluctantly, chased off by the polar bear patrol with firecracker shells and spotlights. On the surface, these bears might not seem like members of a species facing possible extinction. Scientists have counted up to 80 at a time in or near Kaktovik; many look healthy and plump, especially in the early fall, when their presence overlaps with the Inupiat village’s whaling sea- son. But the bears that come are climate refugees, on land because the sea ice they rely on for hunting seals is receding. The Arctic is warming twice as fast as KAKTOVIK, Alaska — Come fall, po- lar bears are everywhere around this Arctic village, dozing on sand spits, roughhousing in the shallows, padding down the beach with cubs in tow and attract- ing hundreds of tourists who travel long distances to see them. At night, the bears steal into town, ma- king it dangerous to walk outside with- out a firearm or bear spray. They leave A polar bear near a pile of whale bones outside Kaktovik, Alaska. Sea ice where the bears hunt seals is receding, and whale remains have become a new food source. JOSH HANER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Refugees From an Arctic Thaw Polar Bears Fleeing Starvation Scrounge For Leftovers in an Alaskan Whaling Village By ERICA GOODE CARBON’S CASUALTIES A Predator Threatened Continued on Page A14 After all the allegations of rampant voter fraud and claims that millions had voted illegally, the people who supervised the general election last month in states around the nation have been adding up how many credi- ble reports of fraud they actually received. The overwhelming con- sensus: next to none. In an election in which more than 137.7 million Americans cast ballots, election and law enforce- ment officials in 26 states and the District of Columbia — Demo- cratic-leaning, Republican-lean- ing and in-between — said that so far they knew of no credible alle- gations of fraudulent voting. Offi- cials in another eight states said they knew of only one allegation. A few states reported some- what larger numbers of fraud claims that were under review. Tennessee counted 40 credible al- legations out of some 4.3 million primary and general election votes. In Georgia, where more than 4.1 million ballots were cast, officials said they had opened 25 inquiries into “suspicious voting or election-related activity.” But inquiries to all 50 states (ev- ery one but Kansas responded), found no states that reported indi- cations of widespread fraud. And while additional allegations could surface as states wind up post- election reviews, their conclu- sions are unlikely to change sig- nificantly. The findings unambiguously debunk repeated statements by President-elect Donald J. Trump that millions of illegal voters backed his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton. They also refute warnings by Republican gover- nors in Maine and North Carolina that election results could not be trusted. And they underscore what re- searchers and scholars have said for years: Fraud by voters casting ballots illegally is a minuscule FRAUD AT POLLS WAS MINUSCULE, DESPITE CLAIMS CREDIBLE EVIDENCE RARE Data Reported by States Blue and Red Affirm Validity of Vote By MICHAEL WINES Continued on Page A11 ISTANBUL After two months, the battle to retake the Iraqi city of Mosul from the Is- lamic State has settled into a grinding war of attrition. The front lines have barely budged in weeks. Casualties of Iraqi security forces are so high that some American commanders heading the United States-led air cam- paign worry that they are unsus- tainable. Civilians are being killed or injured by Islamic State snipers and growing numbers of suicide bombers. As the world watches the hor- rors unfolding in Aleppo, Syria, where government forces and al- lied militias bombed civilians and carried out summary executions as they retook the last rebel-held areas, a different tragedy is tran- spiring in Mosul. Up to one million people are trapped inside the city, running low on food and drinking water and facing the worsening cruelty of Islamic State fighters. “ISIS members have become like mad dogs, and every member has the power of immediate exe- cution,” Abu Noor said by tele- phone from his home on the west side of Mosul, which government forces had not reached, referring to the terror group by one of its ac- ronyms. “We live in constant fear and worry.” As the fight drags on, it is look- ing more and more likely that Mo- sul will become one of the first na- tional security issues facing Presi- dent-elect Donald J. Trump when CARNAGE, HUNGER AND FEAR IN IRAQ A War of Attrition to Free Mosul From ISIS This article is by Tim Arango, Eric Schmitt and Rukmini Callimachi. Continued on Page A9 WASHINGTON — Pressure mounted on Sunday for a broader congressional investigation of Russian cyberattacks aimed at in- fluencing the American election, even as a top aide to President- elect Donald J. Trump said there was no conclusive evidence of for- eign interference. The effort was being led by a bi- partisan group of senators, includ- ing John McCain, Republican of Arizona, and Chuck Schumer of New York, the Senate Democratic leader, who called on Sunday for the creation of a Senate select committee on cyberactivity to take the investigative lead on Cap- itol Hill. “Recent reports of Russian in- terference in our election should alarm every American,” the sena- tors wrote on Sunday in a letter to Senator Mitch McConnell, Repub- lican of Kentucky and the majority leader, who has said a select com- mittee is not necessary. “Cyber- security is the ultimate cross-ju- risdictional challenge, and we must take a comprehensive ap- proach to meet this challenge ef- fectively.” The developments served to deepen the fissures between high- ranking lawmakers of both par- ties who see American intelli- gence reports implicating Russia as the basis for additional inquir- ies and Mr. Trump, who continues to reject the conclusions of those reports. Senators Push to Widen Inquiry On Russian Meddling in Election By NICHOLAS FANDOS New York Life, the nation’s third-largest life insurance com- pany, opened in Manhattan’s fi- nancial district in the spring of 1845. The firm possessed a prime address — 58 Wall Street — and a board of trustees populated by some of the city’s wealthiest mer- chants, bankers and railroad mag- nates. Sales were sluggish that year. So the company looked south. There, in Richmond, Va., an en- terprising New York Life agent sold more than 30 policies in a sin- gle day in February 1846. Soon, ad- vertisements began appearing in newspapers from Wilmington, N.C., to Louisville, Ky., as the New York-based company encouraged Southerners to buy insurance to protect their most pre- cious commodity: their slaves. Alive, slaves were among a white man’s most prized assets. Dead, they were considered vir- tually worthless. Life in- surance changed that cal- culus, allowing slave own- ers to recoup three-quar- ters of a slave’s value in the event of an untimely death. James De Peyster Ogden, New York Life’s first president, would later describe the American sys- tem of human bondage as “evil.” But by 1847, insurance policies on slaves accounted for a third of the policies in a firm that would be- come one of the nation’s Fortune 100 companies. Georgetown, Harvard and other universities have drawn na- tional attention to the legacy of slavery this year as they have ac- knowledged benefiting from the slave trade and grappled with how to make amends. But slavery also generated business for some of Reckoning With a Legacy Of Insuring Slaves’ Lives By RACHEL L. SWARNS Continued on Page A12 GEORGE ETHEREDGE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES A policy taken out on a slave named Sarah Moody. Many misdeeds sound like good story material, but not every follow-up results in a juicy column, as a list of outtakes suggests. Crime Scene. PAGE A17 NEW YORK A17-19 The Crimes Left Unchronicled The removal of residents in Syria bogged down after rebels opposed to the process set fire to buses that were meant to carry evacuees. PAGE A4 INTERNATIONAL A4-9 Obstacles in Syria Evacuations Roger Federer, whose year ended in July with a knee injury, says he will return next month in Australia. He will be ranked No. 16 in the world. PAGE D1 SPORTSMONDAY D1-6 Federer Plots His Comeback Ratan Tata, a figure revered in India for his integrity, finds himself in a nasty public fight with his chosen successor for the control of an empire. PAGE B1 BUSINESS DAY B1-5 Battle for the Tata Group Charles M. Blow PAGE A21 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21 Auction transparency has become an issue after a scholar raised doubts about a manuscript’s authenticity. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-8 Beethoven Score Questioned Continued on Page A15 Donald J. Trump, a real estate develop- er visiting Houston for a birthday party in 1989, had the ear of the disgraced former president for two days. PAGE A10 NATIONAL A10-15 Trump’s Connection to Nixon Zsa Zsa Gabor, who appeared fre- quently on television and in films and parlayed her glamorous image and at least eight marriages into grist for her roles, was 99. PAGE B7 OBITUARIES B6-7 Pioneer of a New Fame Odell Beckham Jr., below returning a punt, helped the Giants defeat the Detroit Lions, 17-6, with a one-handed touchdown catch late in the fourth quarter at MetLife Stadium. PAGE D1 Another Beckham Highlight Late Edition VOL. CLXVI . . . No. 57,451 © 2016 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, MONDAY, DECEMBER 19, 2016 Today, partly sunny, a much colder day, high 31. Tonight, mostly clear, cold, low 23. Tomorrow, several hours of sunshine will prevail, cold, high 36. Weather map, Page A16. $2.50

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Page 1: Refugees From an Arctic Thaw

C M Y K Nxxx,2016-12-19,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D54G1D)y+\!$!#!#!]

the rest of the planet, and the ice cover isretreating at a pace that even the climatescientists who predicted the decline findstartling.

Much of 2016 was warmer than nor-mal, and the freeze-up came late. In No-vember, the extent of Arctic sea ice hit arecord low for the month, largely be-cause over a five-day period the ice coverlost more than 19,000 square miles, a de-cline that the National Snow and IceData Center in Colorado called “almostunprecedented” for that time of year.

In the southern Beaufort Sea, where

only reluctantly, chased off by the polarbear patrol with firecracker shells andspotlights.

On the surface, these bears might notseem like members of a species facingpossible extinction.

Scientists have counted up to 80 at atime in or near Kaktovik; many lookhealthy and plump, especially in theearly fall, when their presence overlapswith the Inupiat village’s whaling sea-son. But the bears that come are climaterefugees, on land because the sea icethey rely on for hunting seals is receding.

The Arctic is warming twice as fast as

KAKTOVIK, Alaska — Come fall, po-lar bears are everywhere around thisArctic village, dozing on sand spits,roughhousing in the shallows, padding

down thebeach withcubs in towand attract-ing hundreds

of tourists who travel long distances tosee them.

At night, the bears steal into town, ma-king it dangerous to walk outside with-out a firearm or bear spray. They leave

A polar bear near a pile of whale bones outside Kaktovik, Alaska. Sea ice where the bears hunt seals is receding, and whale remains have become a new food source.JOSH HANER/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Refugees From an Arctic ThawPolar Bears Fleeing Starvation Scrounge

For Leftovers in an Alaskan Whaling Village

By ERICA GOODE

CARBON’S CASUALTIES

A Predator Threatened

Continued on Page A14

After all the allegations oframpant voter fraud and claimsthat millions had voted illegally,the people who supervised thegeneral election last month instates around the nation havebeen adding up how many credi-ble reports of fraud they actuallyreceived. The overwhelming con-sensus: next to none.

In an election in which morethan 137.7 million Americans castballots, election and law enforce-ment officials in 26 states and theDistrict of Columbia — Demo-cratic-leaning, Republican-lean-ing and in-between — said that sofar they knew of no credible alle-gations of fraudulent voting. Offi-cials in another eight states saidthey knew of only one allegation.

A few states reported some-what larger numbers of fraudclaims that were under review.Tennessee counted 40 credible al-legations out of some 4.3 millionprimary and general electionvotes. In Georgia, where morethan 4.1 million ballots were cast,officials said they had opened 25inquiries into “suspicious votingor election-related activity.”

But inquiries to all 50 states (ev-ery one but Kansas responded),found no states that reported indi-cations of widespread fraud. Andwhile additional allegations couldsurface as states wind up post-election reviews, their conclu-sions are unlikely to change sig-nificantly.

The findings unambiguouslydebunk repeated statements byPresident-elect Donald J. Trumpthat millions of illegal votersbacked his Democratic opponent,Hillary Clinton. They also refutewarnings by Republican gover-nors in Maine and North Carolinathat election results could not betrusted.

And they underscore what re-searchers and scholars have saidfor years: Fraud by voters castingballots illegally is a minuscule

FRAUD AT POLLSWAS MINUSCULE,

DESPITE CLAIMS

CREDIBLE EVIDENCE RARE

Data Reported by StatesBlue and Red Affirm

Validity of Vote

By MICHAEL WINES

Continued on Page A11

ISTANBUL — After twomonths, the battle to retake theIraqi city of Mosul from the Is-lamic State has settled into agrinding war of attrition. The frontlines have barely budged inweeks. Casualties of Iraqi securityforces are so high that someAmerican commanders headingthe United States-led air cam-paign worry that they are unsus-tainable. Civilians are being killedor injured by Islamic State snipersand growing numbers of suicidebombers.

As the world watches the hor-rors unfolding in Aleppo, Syria,where government forces and al-lied militias bombed civilians andcarried out summary executionsas they retook the last rebel-heldareas, a different tragedy is tran-spiring in Mosul. Up to one millionpeople are trapped inside the city,running low on food and drinkingwater and facing the worseningcruelty of Islamic State fighters.

“ISIS members have becomelike mad dogs, and every memberhas the power of immediate exe-cution,” Abu Noor said by tele-phone from his home on the westside of Mosul, which governmentforces had not reached, referringto the terror group by one of its ac-ronyms. “We live in constant fearand worry.”

As the fight drags on, it is look-ing more and more likely that Mo-sul will become one of the first na-tional security issues facing Presi-dent-elect Donald J. Trump when

CARNAGE, HUNGER AND FEAR IN IRAQ

A War of Attrition to FreeMosul From ISIS

This article is by Tim Arango, EricSchmitt and Rukmini Callimachi.

Continued on Page A9

WASHINGTON — Pressuremounted on Sunday for a broadercongressional investigation ofRussian cyberattacks aimed at in-fluencing the American election,even as a top aide to President-elect Donald J. Trump said therewas no conclusive evidence of for-eign interference.

The effort was being led by a bi-partisan group of senators, includ-ing John McCain, Republican ofArizona, and Chuck Schumer ofNew York, the Senate Democraticleader, who called on Sunday forthe creation of a Senate selectcommittee on cyberactivity totake the investigative lead on Cap-itol Hill.

“Recent reports of Russian in-terference in our election should

alarm every American,” the sena-tors wrote on Sunday in a letter toSenator Mitch McConnell, Repub-lican of Kentucky and the majorityleader, who has said a select com-mittee is not necessary. “Cyber-security is the ultimate cross-ju-risdictional challenge, and wemust take a comprehensive ap-proach to meet this challenge ef-fectively.”

The developments served todeepen the fissures between high-ranking lawmakers of both par-ties who see American intelli-gence reports implicating Russiaas the basis for additional inquir-ies and Mr. Trump, who continuesto reject the conclusions of thosereports.

Senators Push to Widen InquiryOn Russian Meddling in Election

By NICHOLAS FANDOS

New York Life, the nation’sthird-largest life insurance com-pany, opened in Manhattan’s fi-nancial district in the spring of1845. The firm possessed a primeaddress — 58 Wall Street — and aboard of trustees populated bysome of the city’s wealthiest mer-chants, bankers and railroad mag-nates.

Sales were sluggish that year.So the company looked south.

There, in Richmond, Va., an en-terprising New York Life agentsold more than 30 policies in a sin-gle day in February 1846. Soon, ad-vertisements began appearing innewspapers from Wilmington,N.C., to Louisville, Ky., as the NewYork-based company encouragedSoutherners to buy insurance to

protect their most pre-cious commodity: theirslaves.

Alive, slaves wereamong a white man’smost prized assets. Dead,they were considered vir-tually worthless. Life in-surance changed that cal-culus, allowing slave own-ers to recoup three-quar-ters of a slave’s value in the eventof an untimely death.

James De Peyster Ogden, NewYork Life’s first president, wouldlater describe the American sys-tem of human bondage as “evil.”But by 1847, insurance policies onslaves accounted for a third of thepolicies in a firm that would be-come one of the nation’s Fortune100 companies.

Georgetown, Harvard and

other universities have drawn na-tional attention to the legacy ofslavery this year as they have ac-knowledged benefiting from theslave trade and grappled with howto make amends. But slavery alsogenerated business for some of

Reckoning With a LegacyOf Insuring Slaves’ Lives

By RACHEL L. SWARNS

Continued on Page A12

GEORGE ETHEREDGE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

A policy taken out on a slavenamed Sarah Moody.

Many misdeeds sound like good storymaterial, but not every follow-up resultsin a juicy column, as a list of outtakessuggests. Crime Scene. PAGE A17

NEW YORK A17-19

The Crimes Left Unchronicled

The removal of residents in Syriabogged down after rebels opposed tothe process set fire to buses that weremeant to carry evacuees. PAGE A4

INTERNATIONAL A4-9

Obstacles in Syria Evacuations

Roger Federer, whose year ended inJuly with a knee injury, says he willreturn next month in Australia. He willbe ranked No. 16 in the world. PAGE D1

SPORTSMONDAY D1-6

Federer Plots His Comeback

Ratan Tata, a figure revered in India forhis integrity, finds himself in a nastypublic fight with his chosen successorfor the control of an empire. PAGE B1

BUSINESS DAY B1-5

Battle for the Tata Group

Charles M. Blow PAGE A21

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21

Auction transparency has become anissue after a scholar raised doubts abouta manuscript’s authenticity. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-8

Beethoven Score Questioned

Continued on Page A15

Donald J. Trump, a real estate develop-er visiting Houston for a birthday partyin 1989, had the ear of the disgracedformer president for two days. PAGE A10

NATIONAL A10-15

Trump’s Connection to Nixon

Zsa Zsa Gabor, who appeared fre-quently on television and in films andparlayed her glamorous image and atleast eight marriages into grist for herroles, was 99. PAGE B7

OBITUARIES B6-7

Pioneer of a New FameOdell Beckham Jr., below returning apunt, helped the Giants defeat theDetroit Lions, 17-6, with a one-handedtouchdown catch late in the fourthquarter at MetLife Stadium. PAGE D1

Another Beckham Highlight

Late Edition

VOL. CLXVI . . . No. 57,451 © 2016 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, MONDAY, DECEMBER 19, 2016

Today, partly sunny, a much colderday, high 31. Tonight, mostly clear,cold, low 23. Tomorrow, severalhours of sunshine will prevail, cold,high 36. Weather map, Page A16.

$2.50