Monday, December 7, 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.



Pakistan woman in California shooting attended troubled university
11:36:34 PM

Tashfeen Malik is pictured in this undated handout   photoBy Mehreen Zahra-Malik MULTAN, Pakistan (Reuters) - Security officials have been closely monitoring a university in east Pakistan attended by Tashfeen Malik, the woman involved in last week's mass shooting in California, because of concerns that Islamist militancy was taking hold there. Malik, a Pakistani, attended the sprawling Bahauddin Zakariya University to study pharmacy between 2007 and 2012, after she had lived most of her life in Saudi Arabia. Police and security officials on campus in the Punjabi city of Multan said intelligence officers had been stationed there to monitor militancy among 35,000 students studying in red-brick buildings set amid neatly kept grounds.




Bomb threat triggers evacuations at Florida college - social media
11:22:13 PM
Daytona State College alerted students that it had received a "specific bomb threat" on Monday and was evacuating several buildings at its campus in Daytona Beach, Florida, officials said. Classes were cancelled Monday evening in at least three buildings, according to social media posts by officials at the public college on the state's central east coast, about 55 miles (89 km) northeast of Orlando. The school has recently received other bomb threats, according to local media reports.


Triumphant Venezuela opposition looks to boost economy, free prisoners
11:12:39 PM

Torrealba, secretary of the Venezuelan coalition of   opposition parties, speaks near Lilian Tintori, wife of jailed Venezuelan   opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez during a news conference in CaracasBy Andrew Cawthorne and Eyanir Chinea CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuela's opposition vowed on Monday to revive the OPEC nation's troubled economy and free jailed political activists after winning control of the legislature for the first time in 16 years of Socialist rule. By evening, some results from Sunday's election were not yet in, but the Democratic Unity coalition had already won a commanding majority in the 167-member National Assembly, opening a new chapter in the polarized nation's politics. Opposition leaders said final tallies showed they won a two-thirds majority, or at least 112 seats.




Donald Trump urges ban on Muslims entering U.S.
11:11:51 PM

U.S. Republican presidential candidate Trump speaks   at a campaign stop in Spencer, IowaBy Steve Holland and Emily Stephenson WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump on Monday called for a ban on Muslims entering the United States in the most dramatic response by a candidate yet to a shooting spree last week by two Muslims who the FBI said were radicalised. Withering reaction flowed in from former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, Ohio Governor John Kasich, Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and New Jersey Governor Chris Christie. "Donald Trump is unhinged.




Immediate medical help would have prevented death of Baltimore man -prosecution
11:10:57 PM

Baltimore Police Officer William Porter approaches   the court house in BaltimoreBy Ian Simpson BALTIMORE (Reuters) - The prosecution in the case of a Baltimore police officer charged in the death of a black man in custody said he would not have died had he received immediate medical help, while a defence lawyer attacked the findings of a medical examiner who ruled the death a homicide. Officer William Porter, 26, is accused of manslaughter in the April death of Freddie Gray from a spinal injury suffered while he was transported in a police van. Dr. Morris Marc Soriano, a neurological surgeon from Rockford, Illinois, and witness for the prosecution, said the failure to get Gray medical attention brought on brain death.




California shooting probe focussing on shooters' domestic contacts - source
10:45:55 PM

Tashfeen Malik is pictured in this undated handout   photoWASHINGTON (Reuters) - The investigation into the mass shooting last week in California is now focussing closely on contacts the shooters may have had with radical Islamists in the United States, as opposed to overseas, a government source said on Monday. The source also said evidence in hand so far suggests the radicalisation of the shooters, Syed Rizwan Farook, 28, and his spouse, Tashfeen Malik, 29, started no earlier than 2014. (Reporting by Mark Hosenball; Writing by Tim Ahmann; Editing by Eric Walsh)




U.S. DOJ to examine Chicago Police Department's use of force
10:43:29 PM

Attorney General Lynch announces a law enforcement   action relating to FIFABy Mary Wisniewski CHICAGO (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department said on Monday it will investigate Chicago's police department following protests over the 2014 police shooting death of a black teenager, on the same day local prosecutors said they would not seek charges in another police shooting case. U.S. authorities will look at the department's use of force, including deadly force, among other issues, U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch said at a news briefing. "Our goal in this investigation ... is not to focus on individuals but to improve systems," the United States' top law enforcement official said.




Peru arrests American accused of running child sex tourism ring
10:34:30 PM
Peruvian authorities arrested an American man charged with running a child sex tourism ring out of Lima for the past 10 years and rescued 11 victims aged between 4 and 17, police said on Monday. The arrest of Joshua Brown, 64, along with five accomplices, was the first major bust of a child sex trafficking operation allegedly led by a foreigner in the South American country in recent years. Brown was in police custody and could not be reached for comment on Monday.


FBI says California shooters were radicalised for 'some time'
10:29:31 PM

FBI workers continue investigating at the Inland   Regional Center following Wednesday's attack in San Bernardino, CaliforniaBy Dan Whitcomb SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (Reuters) - Investigators believe the married couple who massacred 14 people in California last week - the U.S.-born husband and his Pakistani wife - had been radicalised "for some time," but no clues pointing to an international plot have yet emerged, the FBI said on Monday. Authorities also have evidence that Syed Rizwan Farook, 28, and his spouse, Tashfeen Malik, 29, had engaged in firearms target practise near their Southern California home, at least once within days of last week's deadly shooting rampage, according to the FBI. The latest disclosures in the FBI-led investigation came as San Bernardino County employees began returning to work under tighter security, five days after Farook, an environmental health inspector for the county, and his spouse opened fire with assault-style rifles on a holiday gathering of his colleagues.




Key ally of Brazil's Rousseff divided over her impeachment
10:25:24 PM

Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff speaks during   a news conference after a meeting with jurists defending her against impeachment   at the Planalto Palace in BrasiliaBy Anthony Boadle BRASILIA (Reuters) - Impeachment proceedings against Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff were delayed on Monday by a fight between supporters and opponents trying to stack a lower house committee that will report on whether she committed an impeachable offence. Rousseff's main ally, the fractious Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB), split over her impeachment, resulting in separate lists of lawmakers to sit on the 65-member committee. The division was a rocky start for Rousseff who is counting on PMDB votes to save her presidency from opposition lawmakers accusing her of breaking budget laws as she ramped up economic stimulus during her re-election campaign last year.




N.Y. judge tosses Saudi developer's $10 billion lawsuit versus Barclays
10:22:09 PM

The Barclays logo is seen outside a branch of the   bank in central LondonBarclays Plc won the dismissal on Monday of a Saudi real estate company's $10 billion lawsuit alleging the bank ceased pursuing lease payments due from the Saudi government on military complexes in order to obtain a banking licence. New York Supreme Court Justice Charles Ramos ruled from the bench in dismissing the 2014 lawsuit by the company, Jadawel International, a unit of London-based MBI International Holdings Inc, a Barclays spokesman said. The lawsuit sought $10 billion in damages for what Jadawel claimed was a fraudulent scheme Barclays hatched to secure the rare Saudi banking licence, selling out Jadawel in the process.




Small blast in central Moscow injures three - agencies
9:34:33 PM
A small explosion at a bus stop in central Moscow injured three people on Monday night, and investigators were treating it as an act of hooliganism, Russian news agencies reported. The blast occurred on Pokrovka street in the Chistiye Prudy part of Moscow, an area that has numerous bars and cafes, possibly after a home-made explosive was thrown from a passing car or nearby building, said Interior Minister spokesman Andrei Galiakberov. Currently, a Moscow police investigative team is working at the scene," Tass news agency quoted Galiakberov as saying.


California shooters radicalised but no sign of international plot - FBI
8:33:35 PM

Tashfeen Malik is pictured in this undated handout   photo(Reuters) - The couple who carried out an attack on a San Bernardino County employee party last week that killed 14 people had been radicalised "for some time" but there was no evidence so far of an international plot, an FBI official said on Monday. Investigators were working to determine when and why U.S.-born Syed Rizwan Farook, 28, and his Pakistani wife, Tashfeen Malik, 29, began plotting the Dec. 2 attack, FBI Assistant Director in Charge David Bowdich told reporters. (Reporting by Laila Kearney)




U.S. citizen who fought for Islamist group surrenders in Somalia - official
8:28:54 PM
By Feisal Omar MOGADISHU (Reuters) - A U.S. citizen who fought for the Somali Islamist group al Shabaab surrendered to authorities in the Horn of Africa country after he defected from the militants, a Somali official said on Monday. Colonel Ali Dalel Hirsi, a military officer, said U.S. citizen Malik John had surrendered to officials on the edge of Barawe, about 220km (135 miles) southwest from the capital Mogadishu. Al Shabaab wants to topple Somalia's Western-backed government and has staged frequent bomb and gun attacks in the capital Mogadishu.


U.S. Homeland Security chief to revamp terrorism alert system
8:15:46 PM

Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Jeh   Johnson talks to the media about holiday travel at Union Station in WashingtonBy Doina Chiacu WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson said on Monday he would soon announce changes to the national alert system to warn the public about terrorism risks. The changes come amid fresh concerns about terrorism in the United States after last Wednesday's shooting in San Bernardino, California, although they were not specifically prompted by it. President Barack Obama has called the shooting, in which 14 people were killed, an act of terrorism.




Armenian vote boosts prime minister's powers, opposition cries foul
8:06:42 PM

Armenia's President Serzh Sargsyan casts his   ballot during a referendum on constitutional changes in Yerevan, ArmeniaBy Hasmik Mkrtchyan YEREVAN (Reuters) - Armenians voted in a referendum to boost the prime minister's powers, results showed on Monday, a move supporters say will bolster stability but opponents warn will entrench the ruling party's control over the ex-Soviet state. Observers from the Council of Europe rights group reported problems with the voting lists and other irregularities, and said that the low turnout suggested many voters saw Sunday's referendum as a piece of political manoeuvring. The ruling Republican party, which called the vote, said minor violations could not affect the result.




Venezuela opposition savours long-craved triumph, unity now key
7:56:32 PM
By Alexandra Ulmer CARACAS (Reuters) - In a side room of an affluent Caracas hotel, the wife of jailed opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez locked hands with the spouses of other detained politicians on Sunday night as they waited for the results of Venezuela's legislative elections. Defeated at the polls time and again during 17 years of "Chavismo," the leftist movement founded by late leader Hugo Chavez, the opposition now hopes the days of Socialist rule are numbered. "Finally we've glimpsed the light," beamed student Yelimar Bayona, 22, as gleeful supporters hugged in the heavily-guarded hotel.


Twelve Syrian refugees to arrive in Texas despite effort to block them
7:40:31 PM
By Lisa Maria Garza DALLAS (Reuters) - Two families of Syrian refugees are due to arrive in Texas on Monday despite efforts by the state to bar their resettlement, including a lawsuit Texas filed last week in federal court. A family of six, comprised of the parents, two children under age 6 and the children's grandparents, are scheduled to arrive in Dallas. The results of the case filed in U.S. District Court in Dallas could determine whether the governors of about 30 states will be able to go through with plans to bar the local resettlement of Syrian refugees.


Arrested CONMEBOL head agrees to U.S. extradition - Paraguay media
7:28:47 PM
Paraguay's Juan Angel Napout, president of the South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL), has agreed to be extradited to the United States after being arrested in Zurich on charges of involvement in bribery schemes for marketing and broadcast rights, the ABC daily reported on Monday. Napout was among 16 football officials charged by U.S. prosecutors on Thursday following a first wave of arrests last May in its investigation of world football's governing body FIFA. Napout and fellow FIFA executive committee member Alfredo Hawit of Honduras were suspended from football by the FIFA ethics committee for 90 days after their arrests.


White House says Venezuelan election shows 'overwhelming desire' for change
7:26:00 PM
The White House said on Monday results of the election for Venezuela's National Assembly showed a clear desire for change and were "encouraging." "The people of Venezuela have expressed their overwhelming desire for a change in direction," White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters, noting it was too soon to tell whether the results would lead to a change in the nation's relationship with the United States.


Top tribunal to consider temporarily lifting Platini ban
7:06:29 PM

UEFA President Platini attends a news conference   after the draw for the 2015/2016 UEFA Europa League soccer competition at   Monaco's Grimaldi Forum in Monte CarloBy Brian Homewood BERNE (Reuters) - Sport's highest tribunal will meet on Tuesday to consider temporarily lifting the 90-day suspension on Michel Platini barring him from seeking the presidency of football's scandal-plagued governing body FIFA. Platini, the European football boss who until recently was seen as the man to lead FIFA out of its worst ever graft crisis, was suspended by FIFA's ethics committee on Oct. 8 pending a full investigation into his conduct. Sepp Blatter, who has been FIFA president since 1998, was also suspended after being swept up by a crisis that has led to criminal investigations into the sport in both Switzerland and the United States.




Florida man tied to hacking case involving JPMorgan indicted
6:54:59 PM

A magnifying glass is held in front of a computer   screen in this picture illustration taken in BerlinBy Nate Raymond NEW YORK (Reuters) - A Florida man has been indicted for scheming to make illicit payments to an official at a credit union that prosecutors say facilitated an illegal bitcoin exchange owned by an Israeli linked to cyber attacks on companies including JPMorgan Chase & Co . Yuri Lebedev, 37, pleaded not guilty on Friday to a one-count indictment filed last week in Manhattan federal court, a spokeswoman for Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said on Monday. Lebedev was arrested in July along with a Florida man, Anthony Murgio, for engaging in a conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitting business.




UK's long-delayed Heathrow decision likely to slip again - source
6:28:14 PM

Posters against Heathrow expansion hang at the   'Grow Heathrow' protest camp in the village of Sipson near to Heathrow   Airport, west LondonBy Kate Holton and Sarah Young LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister David Cameron is unlikely to give final approval for expanding Heathrow Airport as expected this month, further delaying the politically charged decision which has been 25 years in the making, an industry source said. Cameron had promised a decision on whether to back the 23 billion-pound ($35 billion) expansion programme by the end of the year but the person familiar with the process said this was now likely to come next year, possibly only after London's mayoral election in May. "We now expect the final decision next year," said the source, speaking on the condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the issue. The debate over a third runway at the airport has pitted environmentalists and voters in affluent west London against the country's biggest businesses and some politicians who see expansion as vital for economic growth.




Swedish legal watchdog rejects proposal for border controls
6:24:41 PM

Police organize the line of refugees at on the   stairway leading up from the trains arriving from Denmark at the Hyllie train   station outside MalmoThe top legal watchdog in Sweden, a major destination for migrants flocking to Europe this year, on Monday rejected a government request for the right to impose tighter border controls and shut a bridge to Denmark. The Swedish Council on Legislation said the centre-left government's plan resembled martial law and would violate refugees' right to seek asylum in Sweden. Stockholm imposed temporary border controls in early November, the first in over two decades and a turn-around in its open-doors policy.




Suspect carried out 'hideous' London knife attack for Syria, British court hears
6:17:28 PM

Police officers investigate a crime scene at   Leytonstone underground station in east LondonBy Michael Holden LONDON (Reuters) - A man accused of attacking a commuter with a knife at an east London underground train station said he was acting for Syria, a prosecutor told a London court on Monday. Muhaydin Mire, 29, of east London, was charged with attempted murder in attacking a 56-year-old commuter from behind at the ticket gates of Leytonstone underground station on Saturday evening, Westminster Magistrates' Court heard. Police are treating the incident as a terrorist attack.




Corrected - Yemen peace talks to start Dec 15 alongside ceasefire - U.N.
5:49:38 PM

The UN special envoy for Yemen Cheikh Ahmed gives a   statement in Geneva(Corrects first paragraph and quote in fourth paragraph to remove mention of "humanitarian" ceasefire) By Stephanie Nebehay and Mohammed Ghobari GENEVA/DUBAI (Reuters) - Yemen's warring parties are expected to observe a ceasefire and start U.N.-sponsored peace talks in Switzerland from Dec. 15 in a bid to end months of fighting that have killed nearly 6,000 people, the United Nations said on Monday. Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed, U.N. special envoy to Yemen, said that the exiled Yemen government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and Iran-backed Houthis were committed to the peace process laid down by the Security Council last April. "I have been strongly encouraging the parties to work on confidence-building measures including implementing a ceasefire, the releasing of prisoners and facilitating the delivery of humanitarian supplies," Ould Cheikh Ahmed told reporters in Geneva where he announced the talks.




After Paris, Balkans considers regional fight against arms smuggling
5:38:21 PM
By Daria Sito-Sucic SARAJEVO (Reuters) - Western Balkan governments are looking at creating a network of experts to help tackle the illicit trade in weapons from the region, officials said on Monday, amid concerns after the Paris attacks about guns falling into the hands of militant Islamists. Some of the assault rifles used by the perpetrators of the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris, claimed by Islamic State and in which 130 people died, were traced to the former Yugoslavia. Former Yugoslavia, which collapsed in turmoil and war in the 1990s, has long been a rich source of illicit weapons for criminal gangs in Europe.


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