Thursday, September 17, 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.



India's dream of borderless trade grinds to a halt at checkpoints
9:58:13 PM

Truck drivers and helpers wait for their turn to   submit their documents to get their loads cleared to cross a checkpoint at the   Commercial Taxes Department check post at WalayarBy Sandhya Ravishankar and Rajesh Kumar Singh WALAYAR/NEW DELHI, India (Reuters) - At the Walayar checkpoint in southern India, lines of idle trucks stretch as far as the eye can see in both directions along the tree-lined interstate highway, waiting for clearance from tax inspectors that can take days to complete. Delays are so bad that textile entrepreneur D Bala Sundaram has stopped sending his trucks to the international container terminal at nearby Cochin, instead diverting them hundreds of kilometres to a smaller regional port and onwards via Sri Lanka. "Our containers would get stuck for four to five days," said Sundaram, who runs a firm with an annual turnover of $150 million.




Croatia bans traffic on roads to seven border crossings with Serbia
9:48:32 PM

A migrant holds a sack pack on his head as he lies on   the railway track in TovarnikThe Croatian police said on Thursday it banned all traffic on roads leading to seven border crossings with Serbia. The traffic ban includes the border crossing of Tovarnik, near where most migrants entered Croatia from Serbia over the last two days. Police said 11,003 migrants have entered Croatia since Wednesday morning.




FIFA suspends number-two official after ticket allegations
9:46:54 PM

FIFA Secretary General Jerome Valcke attends a news   conference in SamaraBy Mark Hosenball and Mica Rosenberg ZURICH/NEW YORK (Reuters) - World football body FIFA put Jerome Valcke, its second-ranking official, on leave on Thursday just hours after an ex-footballer raised allegations he may have been involved in a deal to resell 2014 World Cup tickets for a lucrative profit. FIFA, which has been rocked by corruption investigations by Swiss and U.S. authorities, said in a statement it was made aware of allegations involving Secretary General Valcke and has requested a formal investigation by the FIFA ethics committee. Earlier on Thursday, former Israeli football player Benny Alon said at a news conference in Zurich that he agreed in 2013 to pay cash to Valcke to secure plum World Cup tickets in Brazil.




Recall settlement frees GM CEO to confront new challenges
9:25:53 PM

A General Motors logo is seen on a vehicle for sale   at the GM dealership in CarlsbadBy Joseph White, Jonathan Stempel and Nate Raymond DETROIT/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Hours after General Motors Co agreed on Thursday to pay $900 million to settle criminal charges related to a bungled recall, Chief Executive Mary Barra said the legal and public relations crisis that has shadowed her for nearly two years was "a catalyst for meaningful change." Now, Barra must show investors and consumers that the change at the No. 1 U.S. automaker is real, and goes beyond the steps she ordered to attack the engineering and managerial lapses that resulted in GM waiting more than a decade to fix dangerous vehicle defects now linked to 124 deaths. GM shares rose modestly on Thursday as investors digested details of the criminal settlements, for which the automaker will take a $1.475 billion third-quarter charge, including $575 million for private litigation.




Bergdahl deliberately snuck off post - U.S. military prosecutors
8:40:02 PM

U.S. Army Sergeant Bowe Berghdal is pictured in   handout photo provided by U.S. ArmyBy Jon Herskovitz SAN ANTONIO (Reuters) - U.S. Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl, a former prisoner of war in Afghanistan held for five years before being swapped in 2014 for five Taliban leaders, deliberately left his post, U.S. military prosecutors said in opening statements on Thursday. The prosecutors told a preliminary hearing to establish probable cause that Bergdahl launched a plan that was weeks in the making and there was sufficient evidence to hold him for trial on charges of desertion and misbehaviour before the enemy.




U.S. report calls for release of immigrant children from detention
8:01:50 PM
A stinging report released on Thursday called on the Obama administration to reverse course and stop detentions of women and children who entered the United States illegally but might qualify for asylum. The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights said it found evidence that the federal government "was interfering with the constitutional rights afforded to detained immigrants," including their access to legal representation. The commission, created in 1957, describes itself as an independent, bipartisan federal agency that helps develop civil rights policy and enhance enforcement of civil rights laws.


GM's $900 million accord with U.S. gets judge's approval
7:26:53 PM

Rack of SUV doors sit on a cart at the General Motors   Assembly Plant in Arlington, TexasNEW YORK (Reuters) - A U.S. judge on Thursday signed off on General Motors Co's agreement to pay the U.S. Justice Department $900 million to settle criminal charges related to the company's concealment of a lethal defect in its vehicle ignition switches. U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan said she would approve the Detroit-based automaker's deferred prosecution agreement, which resolved the criminal probe into a defect that has been linked to 124 deaths. (Reporting by Nate Raymond; Writing by Joseph Ax; Editing by Meredith Mazzilli)




GM also resolves civil lawsuits over ignition-switch defect
7:25:04 PM

General view of the front entrance at the General   Motors Assembly Plant in Arlington, TexasBy Jessica Dye NEW YORK (Reuters) - General Motors Co said on Thursday it has reached agreements to settle significant portions of the civil litigation brought against it over faulty ignition switches that prompted the recall of millions of vehicles and was linked to 124 deaths. The deals were announced alongside GM's $900 million settlement with U.S. prosecutors to end a criminal probe into the switch problems. One would settle about 1,380 injury and death claims consolidated in New York federal court, and another would resolve litigation brought by GM shareholders who say the company lost billions in market value because of safety issues.




Last bid to kill Iran nuclear deal blocked in U.S. Senate
6:50:19 PM
By Patricia Zengerle WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senate Democrats on Thursday blocked legislation meant to kill the Iran nuclear deal for a third time, securing perhaps the greatest foreign policy win of President Barack Obama's six years in office and clearing the way to implement the accord. By a 56-42 vote, the Republican-majority Senate fell short of the 60 votes needed to advance in the 100-member chamber. Despite an intense and expensive lobbying effort against it, all but four of Obama's fellow Democrats backed the nuclear pact between the United States, five other world powers and Tehran announced in July.


With no U.S. trade loans, GE to build turboprop engines in Europe
6:36:26 PM

The logo of US conglomerate General Electric is   pictured at the company's site in BelfortBy David Lawder and Lewis Krauskopf WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Turning up the pressure on Congress to revive the U.S. Export-Import Bank, General Electric Co said on Thursday it would open a new development centre for turboprop engines in Europe because it cannot access U.S. export financing. The GE's move was the latest effort by a big company to raise the alarm in Washington about the shutdown of new financing by EXIM, so far with little evident impact on Congress. It said it will develop, test and produce engines for larger aircraft, a new market for GE Aviation.




GM to pay $900 million, settle U.S. criminal case over ignition switches - sources
6:17:04 PM

File photo of General Motors logo outside its   headquarters at the Renaissance Center in DetroitBy David Ingram, Nate Raymond and Joseph White NEW YORK (Reuters) - General Motors Co has agreed to pay $900 million and sign a deferred-prosecution agreement to end a U.S. government investigation into its handling of an ignition-switch defect linked to 124 deaths, two sources told Reuters. The deal means GM will be charged criminally with hiding the defect from regulators and in the process defrauding consumers, but the case will be put on hold while GM fulfills terms of the deal, one source said. The company's expected $900 million payment, confirmed by a second source, is less than the $1.2 billion that Toyota Motor Corp paid to resolve a similar case.




Berlin police shoot dead convicted militant after knife attack
5:55:53 PM
German police said on Thursday that they had shot dead a man they described as a convicted member of a terrorist group after he attacked a policewoman in western Berlin with a knife. "He had been convicted of being a member of a terrorist association and of being involved in a plot to murder the Iraqi prime minister," Berlin police said on Twitter. German media identified the man as Rafik Y. In 2008, three men, including one named Rafik Mohamad Yousef, were convicted in Germany of hatching a plot to kill Iraqi prime minister Ayad Allawi during a visit to Berlin in 2004.


Activists outraged as Saudi diplomat accused of raping Nepali maids flees
4:51:06 PM

Two veiled Nepali women, who told police they were   raped by a Saudi official, walk outside Nepal's embassy in New Delhi, IndiaBy Nita Bhalla NEW DELHI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The departure of a Saudi diplomat accused of repeatedly raping and torturing two Nepali maids in his home outside Delhi sparked outrage in India on Thursday with activists calling on the United Nations to pressure Riyadh to take up the matter. Citing the diplomatic immunity under the Vienna Convention, foreign ministry spokesman Vikas Swarup confirmed in a statement late on Wednesday that Majed Hassan Ashoor, the first secretary at the Saudi embassy, had left India.




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