Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Criminal News Headlines | National News - Yahoo India News

Your RSS feed from RSSFWD.com. Update your RSS subscription
RSSFWD

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.



Authorities urge remaining Oregon occupiers to quit after killing
Thursday, January 28, 2016 12:11 AM

Inmates are seen in police jail booking photos   released by the Multnomah County Sheriff's OfficeBy Peter Henderson BURNS, Ore. (Reuters) - State and federal authorities pleaded with the armed men still occupying a U.S. wildlife refuge in Oregon to leave on Wednesday, a day after an attempt to resolve the standoff peacefully by detaining their leader ended with one man shot to death. Law enforcement surrounded the refuge and blocked off access roads on Tuesday evening, after occupation leader Ammon Bundy and his group were taken into custody at a traffic stop along Highway 395. Citing the investigation, authorities declined to say what led to the fatal shooting of one member of Bundy's group, identified by activists as Robert LaVoy Finicum, a rancher who acted as a spokesman for the occupiers.




Bombardier is sued by Comerica over aircraft payments
11:58:20 PM
Bombardier Inc was sued on Wednesday for at least $10.1 million (C$14.2 million) by a unit of Comerica Inc , after the Canadian aircraft maker was unable to find buyers for four planes whose leases had expired. According to a complaint filed in the U.S. District Court in Manhattan, Comerica Leasing Corp was the beneficiary under owner trusts that had bought the planes from Bombardier, and then leased them for 16-1/2 years to a predecessor of SkyWest Inc's ExpressJet unit. Comerica said Bombardier had guaranteed minimum residual values for the CL-600 business jets, which were developed by the former Canadair, and would make up shortfalls if it found no buyers or received only low bids within 90 days after the leases expired.


Brazil says beach apartments tied to corruption scheme
11:56:52 PM

The Brazil's state-run Petrobras oil company   headquarters is pictured in Rio de JaneiroBy Caroline Stauffer SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Beach-side apartments in Brazil may have been used as bribes and to launder money for members of the ruling Workers' Party, police and prosecutors said on Wednesday after ordering six arrests and 15 search warrants. In the latest phase of Brazil's largest-ever corruption probe, investigators are looking into whether construction firm OAS SA used apartments in the Solaris complex in Guaruja as bribes in a corruption scheme involving state-run oil firm Petrobras . Dozens of executives and politicians have been arrested or are under investigation on suspicion of overcharging Petroleo Brasileiro SA, as the company is formally known, and using part of the proceeds to bribe members of President Dilma Rousseff's ruling coalition.




Sudan says defeats Darfur rebel group after two weeks of fighting
9:01:20 PM

Internally displaced children attend a class session   inside a makeshift bamboo structure at the in El Geneina camp in West Darfur,   SudanSudan's army said it defeated one of the main rebel groups in the Jebel Marra region of war-torn Darfur on Wednesday and now controls the area following two weeks of intense fighting. The army has opened main roads in the region after dealing heavy blows to the SPM Abdelwahed movement, local Darfur officials told Sudanese Media Centre, a website close to the country's security services. SPM Abdelwahed is one of the main rebel groups in Darfur.




Saudi strikes on Yemen civilians may be crimes against humanity - U.N.
9:00:10 PM

A Houthi militant stands guard outside the house of   court judge Yahya Rubaid after a Saudi-led air strike destroyed it, killing him,   his wife and five other family members, in Yemen's capital SanaaBy Michelle Nichols UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - A Saudi-led coalition fighting in neighbouring Yemen has targeted civilians with air strikes and some of the attacks could be a crimes against humanity, United Nations sanctions monitors said in an annual report to the Security Council. The report by the U.N. panel that monitors the conflict in Yemen for the Security Council, seen by Reuters on Wednesday, sparked calls by rights groups for the United States and Britain to halt sales of weapons to Saudi Arabia that could be used in such attacks. The panel of experts documented 119 coalition sorties "relating to violations of international humanitarian law" and said that "many attacks involved multiple air strikes on multiple civilian objects." The U.N. experts said all parties to the conflict in Yemen were violating international humanitarian law.




Accused UK trader likely not a factor in 'flash crash' - paper
8:48:12 PM

The sun sets on the address where Nav Sarao Futures   Limited is registered, in HounslowBy John McCrank NEW YORK (Reuters) - A British trader facing extradition to the United States in a trial next week for allegedly helping trigger the 2010 "flash crash" likely had little, if anything, to do with the event, according to a draft of a new academic research paper. Navinder Singh Sarao was arrested by British police on a U.S. extradition warrant in April after being charged with wire fraud, commodities fraud and market manipulation by the U.S. Justice Department. The U.S. authorities accuse him of playing a part in the Wall Street flash crash on May 6, 2010, in which the Dow Jones Industrial Average briefly plunge more than 1,000 points, temporarily wiping out nearly $1 trillion in market value.




Before arrest, U.S. sought Shkreli's communications with lawyer
8:04:05 PM

File photo of Shkreli, chief executive officer of   Turing Pharmaceuticals and KaloBios Pharmaceuticals Inc, departing U.S. Federal   Court in New YorkBy Nate Raymond NEW YORK (Reuters) - Days before Martin Shkreli's arrest for securities fraud, U.S. prosecutors obtained a secret court order ruling that communications between the former pharmaceutical executive and a corporate lawyer also under investigation were not protected by attorney-client privilege. The order by U.S. District Judge Jack Weinstein in Brooklyn, New York, unsealed on Tuesday, provides a glimpse into how prosecutors built their case against Shkreli during his time as a hedge fund manager and CEO of drug company Retrophin Inc . Shkreli, who until recently was Turing Pharmaceuticals' chief executive, was arrested Dec. 17, along with Retrophin's outside counsel, Evan Greebel.




Italy parliament rejects two no-confidence votes against Renzi
8:00:50 PM

Italian Prime Minister Renzi gestures next to   Minister for Constitutional Reforms and Parliamentary Relations Boschi at the   Senate in RomeBy Steve Scherer ROME (Reuters) - Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi on Wednesday defeated two no-confidence motions brought by the opposition in parliament, which has accused the government of having a conflict of interest during the rescue of four small banks last year. Renzi's Senate allies easily repulsed the no-confidence motions - brought separately by the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement and the centre-right opposition - that would have prompted the collapse of the government had they been lost. The motions accused Renzi's government of having a conflict of interest because his 35-year-old reform ministerm Maria Elena Boschi, was linked to one of the saved lenders.




Italy Senate rejects second of two no-confidence motions against Renzi
7:57:03 PM
Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi on Wednesday defeated the second of two no-confidence motions brought by the opposition in parliament which accused the government of having a conflict of interest during the rescue of four small banks last year. The Senate voted 174 to 84 to reject the motion. The votes, brought by two separate opposition groups, would have prompted the collapse of Renzi's government had he lost them.


Wife of U.S. pastor freed by Iran files for legal separation
7:47:21 PM

Naghmeh Abedini is pictured in the home of her   parents in West Boise, IdahoThe wife of Saeed Abedini, an American pastor freed this month from an Iranian prison as part of a prisoner swap, has filed for legal separation from her husband, according to an Idaho state judiciary website. Naghmeh Abedini previously said in a message to supporters that became public last fall that her husband had been abusive and suffered from a pornography addiction. Naghmeh Abedini said on Wednesday that her husband, freed earlier this month, had threatened the end of their marriage.




Curfew widened in southeast Turkey, clashes kill 23
6:51:40 PM

Kurdish protesters stage a picket against   Turkey's policy towards Kurds outside the Reichstag, seat of the German lower   house of Parliament Bundestag in BerlinBy Seyhmus Cakan DIYARBAKIR, Turkey (Reuters) - Security forces killed 20 Kurdish militants in southeast Turkey while three Turkish soldiers died in a rebel attack, the military said on Wednesday, as authorities widened a curfew in the mainly Kurdish region's largest city, Diyarbakir. Hundreds of locals, including children and the elderly, fled curfew-bound areas of Diyarbakir's Sur district as gunfire and blasts resounded and police helicopters flew overhead, a Reuters witness said. Southeastern Turkey has endured its worst violence in two decades since a 2-1/2-year-old ceasefire between the state and Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants collapsed in July, reviving a conflict that has killed 40,000 people since 1984.




EU seeks more powers over national car regulations after Volkswagen scandal
6:08:26 PM

Workers stand next to a Volkswagen logo at a   dealership in MadridBy Alissa de Carbonnel BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union sought sweeping powers over national car regulations on Wednesday, aiming to prevent a repeat of Volkswagen's emissions test cheating scandal and sparking a tough debate as governments and industry resist change. Under the proposed new rules, Brussels would be able to demand spot checks on vehicles, order recalls and impose penalties on carmakers of up to 30,000 euros ($32,600) per vehicle for failure to comply with environmental laws if no fine is being imposed by the member state. The new plans would also authorise individual EU member states to recall cars in violation of regulations but approved by other members of the bloc, encouraging peer review.




Turkish prosecutor seeks life without parole for jailed journalists - document
5:55:32 PM

Demonstrators shout slogans during a protest outside   the headquarters of Cumhuriyet newspaperBy Gulsen Solaker and Ece Toksabay ANKARA (Reuters) - A Turkish prosecutor is seeking life sentences without parole for two prominent journalists on charges of assisting terrorists, according to a court document seen by Reuters, after they published video footage purporting to show the state intelligence agency helping to send weapons to Syria. Can Dundar, editor-in-chief of the secular Cumhuriyet newspaper, and senior editor Erdem Gul were arrested in November in a case that has drawn international condemnation and revived concern about press freedom under President Tayyip Erdogan. Cumhuriyet published photos, videos and a report in May which it said showed intelligence officials transporting arms to Syria in trucks - allegedly to opposition fighters - in 2014.




Twenty years on, TV series brings O.J. Simpson case full circle on race
4:44:28 PM

Cast members participate in a panel for the FX   Networks "The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story" during the   Television Critics Association (TCA) Cable Winter Press Tour in PasadenaWhen producers began work three years ago on a new TV series about the O.J. Simpson murder trial, they took a chance on whether Americans would still care about a case that captivated the nation 20 years ago. "The People v. O.J. Simpson," a 10-episode drama series starting on the FX network on Feb. 2, sets the 1994 arrest, year-long trial and acquittal of one of America's best-loved sporting heroes firmly in the arena of the nation's still troubled history of race relations. The first image viewers see is TV footage of the 1992 Los Angeles riots that followed the acquittal of four white police officers in the beating of black motorist Rodney King.




RSSFWD - From RSS to Inbox
3600 O'Donnell Street, Suite 200, Baltimore, MD 21224. (410) 230-0061
WhatCounts

No comments:

Post a Comment