Thursday, February 5, 2015

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.



Indian women fight sex pests with smartphones and Internet
9:42:52 AM
By Nita Bhalla NEW DELHI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Indian women armed with smartphones are using the clout of social media to fight sexual harassment by filming and publicly shaming men who molest them as greater awareness of violence against women spreads. In the latest of a series of incidents, a young Indian woman used her smartphone to shoot video of a man sitting behind her on an IndiGo airline flight who tried to grope her between the seats. The video, posted on YouTube this week, went viral, adding to growing anger over gender violence in the world's second most populous country where women are frequently sexually harassed in public and on transportation. The incident sparked public protests and led to a national debate about the security of women - encouraging victims once embarrassed to come forward to use smartphones to expose perpetrators.


Christian protesters clash with police in Delhi
8:46:36 AM

Demonstrators shout slogans as they hold placards   during a protest outside a church in New DelhiHundreds of Christian protesters clashed with police in Delhi on Thursday as they tried to press demands for better government protection amid concern about rising intolerance after a series of attacks on churches. About 200 police were stationed outside the cathedral while several hundred protesters were inside, a Reuters' photographer said. A spokesman for Delhi police did not respond to a request for comment. The latest was reported on Monday when an individual stole ceremonial items and threw holy water on the altar.In December, a Catholic church in north Delhi was gutted in a fire in a case of suspected arson.




Anti-Semitic incidents in UK reach record level - advisory group
8:23:46 AM
By Michael Holden LONDON (Reuters) - The number of anti-Semitic incidents in Britain rose to a record level in 2014, more than double the previous year, due to events in the Middle East involving Israel, a Jewish advisory body said on Thursday. The figures, which Home Secretary (interior minister) Theresa May called "deeply concerning", come amid rising safety fears among Britain's estimated 260,000 Jews following the deadly attack on a Jewish supermarket in Paris by an Islamist gunman last month. The Community Security Trust, which provides security advice to Britain's Jews, said there had been 1,168 anti-Semitic incidents last year, a 25 percent increase on the previous record high recorded in 2009. The CST, which began monitoring anti-Semitic incidents in 1984, said the major reason for the rise was fighting between Israeli forces and Palestinians in Gaza which began in July, and led to a record monthly figure.


Sprinting for security: police wearing spycams to run in Tokyo marathon
7:04:50 AM

Runners fill the street in front of the Tokyo   Metropolitan Government Building at the start of the Tokyo Marathon 2009 in TokyoMingling with more than 30,000 runners at this month's Tokyo Marathon will be a small, elite crew of police runners equipped with cameras capturing real-time footage of the course. Japan is stepping up security measures after Islamic State militants in the Middle East said they had beheaded two Japanese hostages, sparking fears of Islamist-linked attacks at home. Security for the annual race had already been tightened after the deadly bombing at the 2013 Boston Marathon, a police spokesman said. The 64 police runners will join thousands of law enforcers and security guards posted for protection along the route of the Feb. 22 race, which is set to draw 36,000 racers and more than 100,000 spectators this year.




Food hijack by Islamic State fuels debate over transparency of aid
6:40:15 AM
By Chris Arsenault ROME (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The hijacking of United Nations aid deliveries by Islamic State fighters in Syria sparked outrage this week, reviving a debate about how humanitarian groups should work effectively to ensure crucial supplies reach victims in conflict zones. Photos of fighters from the militant Islamic group handing out what appear to be boxes of aid from the U.N.'s World Food Programme (WFP) with "Islamic State in Syria" labels pasted over the WFP logo have been circulating on the Internet. The WFP condemned the "manipulation of desperately needed food aid".


U.S. health insurer Anthem hit by massive cybersecurity breach
6:37:40 AM

People pose in front of a display showing the word   'cyber' in binary code, in this picture illustration taken in ZenicaHealth insurer Anthem Inc, which has nearly 40 million U.S. customers, said late on Wednesday that hackers had breached one of its IT systems and stolen personal information relating to current and former consumers and employees. The No. 2 health insurer in the United States said the breach did not appear to involve medical information or financial details such as credit card or bank account numbers. The information accessed during the "very sophisticated attack" did include names, birthdays, social security numbers, street addresses, email addresses and employment information, including income data, the company said. Anthem said that it immediately made every effort to close the security vulnerability and reported the attack to the FBI.




Exclusive: Obama finds bipartisan support for first 'Big Data' privacy plan
5:15:42 AM

Obama makes a point with his finger as he delivers   remarks at the House Democratic Issues Conference in PennsylvaniaBy Roberta Rampton WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White House is working with bipartisan sponsors on a bill to protect data collected from students through educational apps - the first of President Barack Obama's "Big Data" privacy plans to gain traction in the Republican-controlled Congress. Obama has pushed to do more to protect privacy in an age when consumers leave a trail of digital footprints through smart phones, personal devices and social media - information that can be collected, analyzed and sold. "I think there's much more pressure now to move legislation and we're certainly going to use all of the resources we have, including the president's time, to ensure that the Congress takes this up," Podesta told Reuters in an interview. In the next couple of weeks, Indiana Congressman Luke Messer, the chairman of the House of Representatives Republican Policy Committee, and Democrat Jared Polis of Colorado, an Internet entrepreneur who founded a network of charter schools, will unveil a student privacy bill.




Accused Silk Road operator convicted on U.S. drug charges
4:32:16 AM
By Nate Raymond NEW YORK (Reuters) - The suspected mastermind behind the underground website Silk Road was convicted on narcotics and other charges on Wednesday for his role in orchestrating a scheme that enabled around $200 million of anonymous online drug sales using bitcoins. Ross Ulbricht, 30, was found guilty by a Manhattan federal jury on all seven counts he faced after a closely watched four-week trial spilling out of U.S. investigations of the use of the bitcoin digital currency for drug trafficking and other crimes. The jury of six men and six women needed a little over three hours to deliberate before finding Ulbricht guilty of charges that included conspiracies to commit money laundering, computer hacking and drug trafficking. Ulbricht, who prosecutors say went by the alias Dread Pirate Roberts in a reference to the 1987 movie "The Princess Bride," faces up to life in prison and a mandatory minimum term of 20 years.


'Power Rangers' actor not charged in California sword death
4:29:03 AM
A former "Power Rangers" actor arrested in Southern California on suspicion of stabbing a roommate to death with a sword has been released from jail after prosecutors declined to charge him, officials said on Wednesday. The slaying on Saturday in Palmdale, north of Los Angeles, followed an argument between actor Ricardo Medina, 36, and his roommate Joshua Sutter that turned violent, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. The Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office asked sheriff's officials on Monday to investigate the case further, and prosecutors declined to file any charge against him, said Ricardo Santiago, a spokesman for the District Attorney's Office. Medina in 2002 played the Red Lion Wild Force Ranger on the "Power Rangers Wild Force" children's television series.


Daily pot use not associated with brain shrinkage - Colorado study
4:23:57 AM

Man holds a marijuana flower during a demonstration   in support of the legalization of marijuana in Buenos AiresDaily marijuana use is not associated with brain shrinkage when using a like-for-like method to control for the effects of alcohol consumption on those who both drink and toke up, a new study from Colorado has found. The study, led by neuroscientists at the University of Colorado at Boulder and published Jan. 28 in the Journal of Neuroscience, points to continued uncertainty about how pot use alters the structure of the brain. The latest research comes as access to pot is expanding following 2012 ballot measures in Washington state and Colorado that legalized its recreational use, and voter-approved measures last year to do the same in Alaska and Oregon. Kent Hutchison, a clinical neuroscientist at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and the senior author of the study, said his team reviewed a number of scientific papers that showed marijuana causes different parts of the brain to shrink, and his team found the studies were not consistent.




NBC's Brian Williams apologizes for Iraq story after soldiers protest
4:12:33 AM

NBC News anchor Brian Williams smiles as he receives   an honorary doctorate in humane letters during commencement ceremonies from George   Washington University on the National Mall in WashingtonNBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams said on Wednesday he was sorry for "making a mistake" when he said he was on a helicopter that was hit and forced down by rocket fire during the 2003 invasion of Iraq, after soldiers complained it was not true. Williams made the claim on his broadcast last Friday while reporting a tribute at a New York Rangers hockey game for a retired soldier who provided ground security during the incident. Williams said he and his news crew were protected by a mechanized platoon from the U.S. Army 3rd Infantry after their Chinook helicopter was crippled by enemy fire.




Rap mogul Knight still hospitalized a day after court hearing
4:09:02 AM
A Los Angeles County Sheriff's spokesman said he did not know what medical condition Knight, 49, was suffering from or when he might be released from the hospital. The music executive's attorney, who appeared with him at an arraignment in Los Angeles Superior Court in Compton on Tuesday, could not be reached for comment on Wednesday. Knight, co-founder of influential hip-hop label Death Row Records, was charged with murder, attempted murder and two counts of felony hit-and-run following the altercation in a burger shop parking lot last week in which prosecutors said he ran over two men with his pickup truck, killing one of them. A lawyer for the second man struck by Knight's vehicle, Cle "Bone" Sloan, told the Los Angeles Times that Sloan had been released from a hospital but had not recovered from his injuries.


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