Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Criminal News Headlines | National News - Yahoo India News

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Criminal News Headlines | National News - Yahoo India News

Latest crime news headlines from Yahoo India News. Find top stories, videos, pictures & in-depth coverage on crime news from national news section.



'Shield' actor Michael Jace arrested for murder of wife
6:29:01 PM
Actor Michael Jace, known for playing a cop in the cable television drama "The Shield," was arrested on suspicion of murder on Tuesday after his wife was found shot to death in their Los Angeles home, police said. His wife, 40-year-old April Jace, was found dead at the home in the Hyde Park section of South Los Angeles when police responded to a report of domestic violence shortly after 8:30 p.m. local time on Monday, according to the Los Angeles Police Department. The shooting took place in the presence of the couple's two young children, who are now in protective custody, Los Angeles Police Lieutenant John Jenal told City News Service. In the 2011 filing, April Jace indicated she had been a public school teacher in Los Angeles for the past 10 years.


Victorious Modi fights tears in first address to parliament
4:51:06 PM

Hindu nationalist Modi the prime ministerial   candidate for India's BJP arrives to attend the BJP parliamentary party   meeting at parliament house in New DelhiBy Shyamantha Asokan NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Narendra Modi fought back tears in an emotional first address to his party in parliament on Tuesday, after the Gujarat chief minister swept to power in an election that has changed the face of politics in the country. Modi will be India's next prime minister after leading the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to a historic victory in a ballot that ended on Friday. The win handed the BJP its first parliamentary majority and reduced the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty's ruling Congress party to 44 seats, the lowest ever tally for a party that won independence and has ruled for most of the 67 years since. He addressed BJP lawmakers filling more than half the seats of Lok Sabha with uplifting words that commentators immediately contrasted with the often wooden addresses of his predecessor Manmohan Singh.




Nuns, backed by pope, warn of human trafficking at World Cup
4:11:34 PM

Nuns Bottani, Castalone and Sammut hold the logo of   an international campaign called "Play in Favour of Life-Denounce Human   Trafficking," on the risks they say will be associated with the June-July   games, as they pose in front of Saint Peter's basilica inBy Philip Pullella VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Roman Catholic nuns backed by Pope Francis on Tuesday raised the alarm over increased risks of human trafficking, exploitation of workers, forced prostitution and sexual tourism at the soccer World Cup in Brazil next month. The nuns, whose campaign is also backed by the U.S. embassy to the Vatican, announced an international campaign called "Play in Favour of Life - Denounce Human Trafficking," on the risks they say will be associated with the June 12 - July 13 tournament. "We need to make people conscious of what happens on the margins of big world events such as the FIFA World Cup and the suffering of those who are trafficked," said Sister Carmen Sammut, a Maltese nun and one of the campaign organisers. "Without this awareness, without acting together in favour of human dignity, the World Cup finals may turn out to be a terrible shame instead of a feast for humanity," she told a news conference at the Vatican.




Generations collide in 'X-Men: Days of Future Past'
3:11:21 PM

Cast members Jackman, Fan and Dinklage wave to fans   at the South East Asia premiere of X-men: Days Of Future Past in SingaporeBy Ernest Scheyder NEW YORK (Reuters) - Trapped in a dystopian future where marauding, shape-shifting robots have turned New York's Central Park into a concentration camp, Hugh Jackman's Wolverine has no choice in "X-Men: Days of Future Past" but to travel back in time to alter history. A sequel to both 2006's "X Men: The Last Stand" and 2011's "X-Men: First Class," the film begins in a future where Sentinel robots are trying to destroy mutants, and follows Wolverine as he travels back to the 1970s, when he does not have the use of his silver-colored claws. "The X-Men movies always have a theme of disenfranchisement or minorities or discrimination," said Jackman, 45, the best actor Oscar nominee for the musical "Les Miserables" whose action film career took off with X-Men. The film, expected to be one of the biggest at the box office this year, has had a dose of unwelcome publicity after two men accused director Bryan Singer of sexually abusing them as teenagers, charges he denies.




Anti-Obama author D'Souza pleads guilty to campaign finance violation
2:54:47 PM

D'Souza exits the Manhattan Federal Courthouse   in New YorkBy Joseph Ax NEW YORK (Reuters) - Conservative author and filmmaker Dinesh D'Souza pleaded guilty on Tuesday to a campaign finance law violation, avoiding a trial that had been expected to begin the same day in a Manhattan federal court. D'Souza, known for his biting criticism of President Barack Obama, pleaded guilty to one criminal count of making illegal contributions in the names of others. The plea came four months after Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara charged D'Souza with using "straw donors" to give funds in 2012 to Republican Wendy Long's U.S. Senate campaign in New York. One of the friends was Denise Joseph, who was engaged to D'Souza while he was still married to another woman.




"No smoking gun" in UK hacking case against Brooks, court told
2:03:24 PM

Former News International executive Rebekah Brooks   arrives at the Old Bailey in central LondonBy Michael Holden LONDON (Reuters) - The phone-hacking trial of Rupert Murdoch's former British newspaper boss Rebekah Brooks was told on Tuesday there was no "smoking gun" evidence to prove she knew about illegal interception of celebrities' voicemail messages. The seven-month trial, now nearing its end, has heard that Brooks condoned the practice at the now-defunct News of the World tabloid in an effort to discover exclusive stories. Brooks denies knowing about phone-hacking while she was editor of the paper and on Tuesday her defence lawyer Jonathan Laidlaw told the Old Bailey court she could not win because of critical and unfair media coverage. Awful things have been said about Rebekah Brooks herself over the last few years." Laidlaw said the prosecution had failed to produce the "mass of evidence, a welter of material" despite a huge police investigation.




Thai army chief urges rivals to talk after declaring martial law
1:58:09 PM

Thai soldiers take their positions in the middle of a   main intersection in Bangkok's shopping districtBy Amy Sawitta Lefevre BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thailand's army declared martial law nationwide on Tuesday to restore order after six months of street protests that have left the country without a proper functioning government, but insisted the surprise intervention was not a military coup. While troops patrolled parts of Bangkok and army spokesmen took to the airwaves, the caretaker government led by supporters of self-exiled former premier Thaksin Shinawatra said it was still running the country. Army chief General Prayuth Chan-ocha said the military had stepped in to restore order and build investor confidence, and warned that troops would take action against anyone who used weapons and harmed civilians. "We ask all sides to come and talk to find a way out for the country," Prayuth told reporters after meeting directors of government agencies and other high-ranking officials.




EU Commission charges HSBC, JPMorgan, Credit Agricole with rigging
1:40:52 PM

European Union Competition Commissioner Joaquin   Almunia addresses a news conference at the EU Commission headquarters in BrusselsBy Foo Yun Chee BRUSSELS (Reuters) - European Union antitrust regulators charged Europe's biggest bank HSBC, U.S. peer JPMorgan and France's Credit Agricole on Tuesday with rigging financial benchmarks linked to the euro, exposing them to potential fines. The European Commission also said it would charge broker ICAP soon for suspected manipulation of the yen Libor financial benchmark. U.S. and European regulators have so far handed down some $6 billion in fines to 10 banks and brokerages for rigging the London interbank offered rate (Libor) and its euro cousin Euribor while prosecutors have also charged 16 men with fraud-related offences. "The Commission has concerns that the three banks may have taken part in a collusive scheme which aimed at distorting the normal course of pricing components for euro interest rate derivatives," the EU competition authority said.




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