Tuesday, March 1, 2016

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.



Top Vatican cardinal says never raised abuse concerns with superiors
Wednesday, March 02, 2016 1:19 AM

A relative of children who were sexually abused by   the Catholic Church holds a placard as she sits outside the venue for   Australia's Royal Commission into Institutional Response to Child Sexual   Abuse in SydneyBy Philip Pullella and Jane Wardell ROME/SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australian Cardinal George Pell, the highest-ranking Vatican official to testify on systemic sexual abuse of children by clergy in the Roman Catholic Church, on Tuesday said he never notified his superiors in the 1970s about rumours of abuse. The Vatican's treasurer told Australia's Royal Commission into Institutional Response to Child Sexual Abuse that he had heard reports of sexual abuse by at least one priest who was moved to another parish, but assumed senior clergy were dealing with the problem. Given Pell's high rank within the church, his testimony to the Australian inquiry into sexual abuse cases that occurred decades ago has taken on wider implications about the accountability of church leaders.




More than a third of people shot by LAPD in 2015 mentally ill - report
Wednesday, March 02, 2016 1:15 AM

File photo of man viewing a memorial for a man killed   by police on skid row in Los AngelesBy Sharon Bernstein (Reuters) - More than a third of people hit by Los Angeles police officers' gunfire last year had indications of mental illness, double the prior year, according to a report on the use of force released on Tuesday by the Los Angeles Police Department. The report, which analysed shootings involving police officers and other uses of force over a five-year period from 2011 to 2014, comes amid increasing concern in Los Angeles and across the United States about police tactics. ...




Brazil says microcephaly cases linked to Zika rise to 4,863
Wednesday, March 02, 2016 12:03 AM

Lucas, 4-months old, who is Miriam Araujos's   second child and born with microcephaly, sleeps on a hammock at their house, in   Sao Jose dos CordeirosThe number of confirmed and suspected cases of microcephaly in Brazil associated with the Zika virus has risen to 4,863 from 4,690 a week earlier, the Ministry of Health said on Tuesday. Of these, the number of confirmed cases climbed to 641 from 583 a week earlier, while suspected ones under investigation increased to 4,222 from 4,107 in the same period. Brazil considers most of the cases of babies born with abnormally small heads to be related to Zika, though the link between the virus and the birth defects has not been scientifically established.




Irish PM seeks to form new gov't, will talk to nearest rival
11:40:56 PM

Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny speaks to the media   at the general election count centre in CastlebarBy Padraic Halpin DUBLIN (Reuters) - The leading party after Ireland's election last week will try to form a government with other parties, including its nearest rival, after its outgoing coalition was rejected by voters, senior Fine Gael members said on Wednesday. Punished last week by voters angry at the patchiness of Ireland's recovery, Prime Minister Enda Kenny's centre-right party is set to fall about 30 seats short of the 80 needed to form a majority in parliament, with two seats yet to be filled. With the second- and third-largest parties, Fianna Fail, and Sinn Fein, ruling out a coalition with Fine Gael, analysts say Kenny will not reach a majority without eventually striking some sort of agreement with Fianna Fail.




NY court allows fraud claim against Trump University to proceed
11:29:08 PM

Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump   speaks to supporters at a Super Tuesday campaign rally in LouisvilleBy Karen Freifeld NEW YORK (Reuters) - Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump suffered a legal setback on Tuesday when a New York state court allowed a multimillion-dollar fraud claim against Trump University, filed by the state's attorney general, to proceed. The claim is part of a lawsuit that accuses Trump and the now-defunct for-profit venture of misleading thousands of people, who paid up to $35,000 to learn the billionaire businessman's real estate investment strategies. Trump University, which Trump chaired, has become a target for his rivals for the Republican presidential nomination, particularly Marco Rubio.




Now or never: Trump's 'wall' talk sparks migrant rush on U.S.-Mexico border
11:22:28 PM

Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump   speaks at a campaign rally at Valdosta State University in Valdosta, GeorgiaBy Gabriel Stargardter and Julia Edwards CIUDAD JUAREZ/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Gang violence and poverty have for years pushed Mexicans and Central Americans north to the United States, but recently a new driver has emerged: the anti-immigrant tone of leading Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. From the slums of Central America to close-knit migrant communities in U.S. cities, Trump's rise to the front of the Republican pack has not gone unnoticed and is partly behind a spike in the numbers of migrants trying to enter the country, including children travelling without guardians. Interviews with migrants, people smugglers and officials show many migrants are trying to cross now instead of facing tighter policing and new policies to halt illegal immigration if Trump or another Republican wins the Nov. 8 election.




Brazil's No. 2 builder admits illegal Rousseff campaign funding - paper
11:21:12 PM

Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff speaks to the   media after a bilateral meeting with Chile's President Michelle Bachelet at   the La Moneda presidential palace in Santiago, ChileExecutives from Brazil's second-largest engineering company, Andrade Gutierrez, have testified that the company paid suppliers for President Dilma Rousseff's 2010 electoral campaign off the books, newspaper a Folha de S.Paulo reported on Tuesday. The testimony, as part of a plea bargain by 11 executives, would be the first direct link between the widening 'Operation Carwash' investigation into bribes and political kickbacks at state-run oil company Petrobras and the election of Rousseff, the paper said. The allegations may bolster the case of the main opposition party PSDB as it seeks to annul Rousseff's 2014 re-election for using illegal funding, though Brazil's top electoral court is unlikely to accept evidence from a previous election.




Secret Service probing agent, photographer fight at Trump rally
11:18:01 PM

Photographer Christopher Morris is removed by   security officials as U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks   during a campaign event in RadfordBy Julia Edwards WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Secret Service is investigating an incident at presidential candidate Donald Trump's rally in Radford, Virginia in which an agent shoved a Time magazine photographer to the ground, an agency spokesman said on Tuesday. "We are investigating the matter fully to find out what our employee did and what the other person did," Kevin Dye told Reuters. Video footage of the altercation on Monday, which was posted on the Internet, shows Time magazine photographer Christopher Morris getting close to the agent, who threw him to the ground and Morris kicking the agent from the floor.




NSA chief says 'when, not if' foreign country hacks U.S. infrastructure
8:40:23 PM

Admiral Michael Rogers, director of U.S. National   Security Agency (NSA), takes part in a conference on national security titled   "The Ethos and Profession of Intelligence" in WashingtonThe U.S. National Security Agency chief said on Tuesday it was a "matter of when, not if" a foreign nation-state attempts to launch a cyber attack on the U.S. critical infrastructure, citing the recent hack on Ukraine's power grid as a cause for concern. Speaking at the RSA cyber security conference in San Francisco, Admiral Michael Rogers said he was also worried about data manipulation and potential offensive cyber threats posed by non-nation-state actors such as Islamic State. The U.S. government said last week a December blackout in Ukraine that affected 225,000 customers was the result of a cyber attack, supporting what most security researchers had already concluded.




U.N. aims to restart Syria peace talks on March 9
8:28:03 PM

United Nations Special Envoy for Syria de Mistura   holds a folder aside of the 31st Session of the Human Rights Council in GenevaBy Tom Miles and Stephanie Nebehay GENEVA (Reuters) - The United Nations will delay the next round of Syria peace talks by two days to allow the cessation of hostilities in force since Saturday to take hold, U.N. Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura said. "We are delaying it to the afternoon of (March) 9th for logistical and technical reasons and also for the ceasefire to better settle down," de Mistura told Reuters on Tuesday. The cessation of hostilities was "a glimmer of hope", Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said, although he accused the opposition of violating the agreement.




U.S. Senate's McConnell condemns white supremacists
8:16:19 PM

Senate Majority Leader McConnell addresses media   during event on Capitol Hill in WashingtonWASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Tuesday condemned white supremacists, in remarks responding to presidential candidate Donald Trump and his failure to disavow a white supremacist group in an interview. McConnell told reporters that there had been a lot of talk in the past 24 hours about "one of our presidential candidates and his seeming ambivalence" to the Ku Klux Klan white supremacist group and David Duke, a former Klan leader. "So let me make it perfectly clear. ...




North Korea vows to shun UN rights forum over political attacks
7:59:06 PM

North Korea's Foreign Minister Yong addresses   attendees during the 70th session of the United Nations General Assembly at the   U.N. Headquarters in New YorkBy Stephanie Nebehay GENEVA (Reuters) - North Korea will boycott any session of the U.N. Human Rights Council that examines its record and will "never, ever" be bound by any such resolutions, its foreign minister said on Tuesday. The announcement signalled further isolation of North Korea whose leadership has been accused by U.N. investigators of committing crimes against humanity and is poised to be hit with fresh U.N. sanctions for its nuclear programme. Foreign Minister Ri Su Yong also accused the United States, Japan and South Korea of sending agents into his country to recruit criminals to become "so-called North Korean defectors".




Top U.S. court set to consider contentious Texas abortion case
7:39:44 PM

U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Kennedy arrives   for the funeral of fellow justice Scalia at the Basilica of the National Shrine of   the Immaculate Conception in WashingtonBy Lawrence Hurley WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court was set to hear its first abortion rights case in nearly a decade on Wednesday as it weighs a Texas law that the state contends protects a woman's health but abortion providers assert is aimed at shutting down their clinics. The Feb. 13 death of conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, who opposed abortion and backed restrictions on it, means the court no longer has five conservatives who might support more restrictive abortion regulations nationwide. The court potentially could split 4-4, with its four liberal justices opposing the abortion restrictions and its four conservatives backing the regulations, an action that would let stand a lower-court ruling that affirmed the Texas law but would not set a nationwide legal precedent.




U.S. Supreme Court standoff looms over Republicans' Senate defence
7:34:54 PM

U.S. President Barack Obama sits during a meeting   with the bipartisan leaders of the Senate to discuss the Supreme Court vacancy   left by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia at the White House in WashingtonBy Richard Cowan and David Morgan WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republicans' refusal to consider any U.S. Supreme Court nominee by President Barack Obama this year could jeopardise the party's control of the Senate, as Democrats use the standoff to challenge vulnerable opponents in an election year. Neither side gave ground.




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