Thursday, December 15, 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.



Jurors asked to hold Charleston church shooting suspect accountable
4:47:34 PM

From the Files - Worst Mass Shootings in the U.S.By Greg Lacour CHARLESTON, S.C. (Reuters) - Racial hatred drove white supremacist Dylann Roof to kill nine people at a historic black church in Charleston, South Carolina, after months of meticulous planning, a federal prosecutor argued on Thursday, asking jurors to hold the accused gunman accountable. Assistant U.S. Attorney Nathan Williams' voice rose in a Charleston courtroom as he criticized the young man's self-proclaimed bravery in carrying out the attack during Bible study at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church on June 17, 2015. There is no bravery in his actions," Williams told jurors in his closing argument at Roof's federal trial.




Traces of explosives found in EgyptAir crash - investigators
4:46:44 PM

Relatives of the Christian victims of the crashed   EgyptAir flight MS804 attend an absentee funeral mass at the main Cathedral in   CairoCAIRO/PARIS (Reuters) - Egyptian air accident investigators said on Thursday traces of explosives had been found on the remains of victims of an EgyptAir flight that crashed en route from Paris to Cairo. Egypt's investigation committee issued a statement saying the coroner had found traces of explosives on the remains of some victims. "The technical investigation committee ... places itself and its expertise at the disposal of prosecutors," it said.




Trump names Montana Congressman Zinke to lead Interior Dept
4:29:29 PM

U.S. Representative Ryan Zinke arrives for a meeting   at Trump Tower in New YorkU.S. President-elect Donald Trump on Thursday formally announced that Montana Congressman Ryan Zinke, a former Navy SEAL commander and a proponent of coal development on federal lands, as his choice for secretary of the interior. If the Senate confirms Zinke, he will head the Interior Department, which employs more than 70,000 people across the country and oversees more than 20 percent of federal land, including national parks like Yellowstone and Yosemite. As a single-term Republican U.S. Representative, Zinke took several stances favoring coal, a fossil fuel that suffered during the administration of President Barack Obama as use of natural gas and renewable energy soared.




Brazil prosecutors hit ex-president Lula with more corruption charges
4:28:45 PM

File photo of Brazil's President Lula da Silva   at Havana's Revolution PalaceBrazilian federal prosecutors on Thursday charged former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva with more corruption charges tied to the massive probe into graft at state-run oil company Petrobras. It is now up to crusading anti-corruption federal judge Sergio Moro to decide if the fresh charges will result in yet another trial for Lula. Lula is already on trial in Moro's southern Brazil court for separate corruption charges, with a ruling not expected before late January or early February.




Trump renews questions about U.S. hacking tied to Russia
4:19:13 PM

U.S. Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump   appearing at a campaign roundtable event in ManchesterU.S. President-elect Donald Trump on Thursday raised more questions about Russia's reported role in cyber attacks on U.S. political parties and individuals as well as the timing of the White House's response under President Barack Obama. "If Russia, or some other entity, was hacking, why did the White House wait so long to act? Why did they only complain after Hillary lost?" Trump wrote in a post on Twitter.




Trump ordered to give deposition in Washington restaurant suit
4:06:41 PM
By Ian Simpson WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Washington judge has ordered Republican President-elect Donald Trump to give a deposition in a lawsuit against celebrity chef Jose Andres stemming from Trump's disparaging remarks about Mexican immigrants. District of Columbia Superior Court Judge Jennifer Di Toro ruled on Wednesday that Trump must testify in New York about Andres' restaurant deal at Trump's luxury Washington hotel.


Dozens of Afghans deported from Germany as Merkel takes firmer line
3:58:52 PM

Afghans, whose asylum applications have been   rejected, arrive from Germany in Kabul airportBy Mohammad Aziz and Madeline Chambers KABUL/BERLIN (Reuters) - A group of 34 rejected Afghan asylum-seekers arrived in Kabul from Germany on Thursday, the German interior ministry said, the first to be deported under an agreement reached between the two countries this year. "It was early morning and I was sleeping when four policemen came to my home and arrested me," said Ali Madad Nasiri, one of the men on board a charter plane that landed in the Afghan capital from Frankfurt. "I didn't have a chance to take my clothes, cellphone and laptop - all left behind," added Nasiri, who said he had been living in Germany for three years.




Yahoo shares fall after latest security breach
3:57:38 PM

A sign advertising internet company Yahoo is pictured   in downtown San FranciscoYahoo Inc's shares fell as much as 3.8 percent on Thursday, a day after the company said that more than 1 billion user accounts were compromised in a security breach in August 2013. The number of users affected by the breach, the largest in history, was double the number implicated in a prior 2014 breach that Yahoo had disclosed in September. Verizon, which has agreed to buy Yahoo's core Internet business for $4.83 billion, had said at the time that it might withdraw from the deal.




Police say Muslim woman made up story about attack on NYC subway
3:51:51 PM
By David Ingram NEW YORK (Reuters) - A woman has been arrested and charged with filing a false report after telling police that three white men yelling President-elect Donald Trump's name had attacked her on a New York City subway for wearing a traditional Muslim head scarf, police said. Yasmin Seweid, 18, was also charged with obstructing governmental administration, a police spokesman said on Thursday. The false report comes as U.S. civil rights advocates have voiced alarm over a rise in attacks on Muslims and other minorities since Trump won the Nov. 8 presidential election.


U.S. sues to recover ancient Syrian artifacts looted by Islamic State
3:50:43 PM
By Yeganeh Torbati WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government is suing to recover four ancient Syrian artifacts it believes were trafficked by Islamic State, U.S. officials said on Thursday, a tiny fraction of the plundered antiquities likely to have passed through the jihadist group's hands. Islamic State used the mayhem of war to establish a lucrative trade in stolen relics dug up from the territory it controlled in Syria and Iraq, which includes remnants of some of the world's oldest and most culturally rich civilizations, according to archaeological experts. U.S. Department of Justice officials filed a complaint in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia on Thursday seeking the forfeiture of the antiquities, including a gold ring with a carved gemstone, two gold coins, and a neo-Assyrian stone stela, together worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.


Philippine government says can live with less aid from U.S.
3:40:33 PM
The Philippines government said on Thursday it could live with less aid from the United States after an agency put on hold a decision to fund a second anti-poverty programme. The Millennium Challenge Corp (MCC), a U.S. poverty reduction agency, said on its website that its board had "deferred a vote on the reselection of the Philippines for compact development, subject to further review of concerns around rule of law and civil liberties". U.S. embassy press attache Molly Koscina said the MCC would continue to monitor unfolding events in the Philippines, but like all country partners, it needed to demonstrate "commitment to the rule of law, due process and respect for human rights".


Yahoo says one billion accounts exposed in newly discovered security breach
3:37:49 PM

Yahoo Mail logo is displayed on a smartphone's   screen in front of code in this illustration pictureYahoo Inc warned on Wednesday that it had uncovered yet another massive cyber attack, saying data from more than 1 billion user accounts was compromised in August 2013, making it the largest breach in history. The number of affected accounts was double the number implicated in a 2014 breach that the internet company disclosed in September and blamed on hackers working on behalf of a government. News of that attack, which affected at least 500 million accounts, prompted Verizon Communication Inc to say in October that it might withdraw from an agreement to buy Yahoo's core internet business for $4.83 billion.




Canada's Trudeau to face ethics questions over party fundraisers
3:30:46 PM

Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrives   at a news conference in OttawaBy David Ljunggren OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, dogged by accusations that rich donors to his Liberal Party gained privileged access, will be questioned by the ethics commissioner to see whether he broke conflict of interest rules, an official said on Thursday. The development marks a new low for Trudeau, who came to power in November 2015 vowing to run an open and ethical government but faces relentless accusations the Liberals are running a cash-for-access scheme. "I will follow up with Mr. Trudeau regarding his involvement with the fundraising events," Ethics Commissioner Mary Dawson said in a letter to Rona Ambrose, interim leader of the official opposition Conservative Party, who had filed a complaint.




Crime wave worsens Venezuela's already shaky telecoms service
3:26:57 PM

A vandalized backup generator is seen at a Movistar   facility in Los TequesBy Diego Oré CARACAS (Reuters) - The clanging sound of collapsing metal shook awake the residents of Guayabal, an industrial zone in the outskirts of Venezuela's capital, last October. Then they watched a 40-meter (131 feet) telecoms tower tumble after thieves had stripped even the screws holding up the installation, which was owned by state telecoms provider CANTV and rented out to private operator Movistar. The theft, which also included copper cables and a generator, was the latest of six at that station this year and one of hundreds worsening crime-rife Venezuela's already shaky telecoms.




Gulf states rebuke Assad over violence in Aleppo
2:24:49 PM
Gulf Arab countries condemned the Syrian government's handling of a ceasefire and evacuation in Aleppo and called on Thursday for civilians trying to flee the war-torn city to be protected. An emergency meeting of Arab League representatives convened at Qatar's request discussed the situation in Aleppo, where an evacuation of the rebel-held eastern part of the city has come under fire from fighters loyal to the Syrian government. The evacuation of Aleppo's last rebel enclave would end years of fighting for the city and mark a major victory for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad Arab League foreign ministers are expected to meet on Monday to discuss the situation further.


Some poor Venezuelan parents give away children amid deep crisis
2:24:07 PM
By Girish Gupta and Mircely Guanipa PUNTO FIJO, Venezuela (Reuters) - Struggling to feed herself and her seven children, Venezuelan mother Zulay Pulgar asked a neighbor in October to take over care of her six-year-old daughter, a victim of a pummeling economic crisis. The family lives on Pulgar's father's pension, worth $6 a month at the black market rate, in a country where prices for many basic goods are surpassing those in the United States. With average wages less than the equivalent of $50 a month at black market rates, three local councils and four national welfare groups all confirmed an increase in parents handing children over to the state, charities or friends and family.


Germany angry with Greece over Afghan refugee murder suspect
1:48:58 PM
A German minister rebuked Greek authorities on Thursday for letting a convicted Afghan criminal slip through the system and make it to Germany where he sought asylum and is now under arrest on suspicion of rape and murder. The case of the 17-year old Afghan, arrested this month in the city of Freiburg, has stirred outrage in Germany and spurred politicians, including Chancellor Angela Merkel, to warn against making generalisations about migrants. Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said the suspect, identified only as Hussein K., had been convicted of attempted murder in Greece 2013 and sentenced to 10 years behind bars.


Sweden to send notorious 'laser man' killer to Germany
1:24:32 PM
Sweden has agreed to temporarily send one of its most notorious criminals to Germany where he is suspected of killing a woman in 1992, a Swedish court said on Thursday. The man, John Asonius, struck terror in Sweden during a racially motivated, six-month crime spree in 1991-1992 were he shot and killed one person and injured ten others in a string of attacks in the Stockholm area. Asonius maintains his innocence but has not objected to being transferred on the condition he can serve any possible jail sentence in Sweden.


EU must talk to war criminals to end Syrian crisis, says France's Fillon
1:23:42 PM

Francois Fillon, member of Les Republicains political   party and 2017 presidential candidate of the French centre-right, visits the   chirurgical clinic Marie Lannelongue in Plessis-RobinsonBy Robin Emmott BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Francois Fillon, the conservative candidate seen as most likely to win next year's French presidential election, said on Thursday that Western policy on Syria had failed and Europe had to talk to those responsible for war crimes to end the killing. After meeting German Chancellor Angela Merkel and leaders of European centre-right parties in Brussels for talks, Fillon said Europe's efforts to stop the Syria conflict had shown "indignation", but this in itself never saved lives and would not stop the slaughter. "I told European leaders that what we are forced to concede today is that Western diplomacy and in particular European diplomacy has failed," Fillon, a former prime minister, told reporters in Brussels, dismissing the option of a U.S. military intervention.




Freed from Mosul, Iraqi brothers carry scars of Islamic State rule
1:06:34 PM

Azad Hassan and his brother Mohammad, whose hands   were chopped off by Islamic State militants, sit next to each other at Nimrud   village, south of MosulBy Patrick Markey AL-DHIBANIYAH, Iraq (Reuters) - His right arm strapped with a tourniquet and numbed by anaesthetic, Azad Hassan sat before the crowd waiting for Islamic State militants to chop off his hand as a punishment. Freed from Islamic State rule in Mosul by Iraqi forces who are fighting to recapture the city, the Hassan family bear more scars than most from two years under the jihadists' self-declared caliphate. The family tragedy parallels Mosul's own recent history, from its storming by Islamic State in 2014, and the imposition of the group's ultra-hardline rule in its de facto capital, to the Iraqi military campaign to retake it which has led to ferocious fighting in eastern districts.




EU parliament warns talks plan risks Brexit deal veto
1:03:24 PM

A cyclist wears a pro-Brexit badge on her Union flag   themed helmet outside the Supreme Court in Parliament Square, central LondonBy Alastair Macdonald and Francesco Guarascio BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Parliament could block a Brexit deal for Britain if EU leaders exclude lawmakers from the negotiating process, its outgoing speaker warned on Thursday as the legislature pushes for a bigger role in the talks. "If we are not adequately involved, we may not be able to give our consent," Parliament President Martin Schulz told an EU summit, according to a text of his remarks. "And in this situation the UK would face the hardest Brexit possible." He earlier told reporters he was "really surprised" by a draft plan for negotiations with London, which Britain's 27 EU partners are due to agree over a post-summit dinner.




Iran sanctions extension act to become law without Obama's signature - White House
12:28:25 PM

A staff member removes the Iranian flag from the   stage after a group picture with foreign ministers and representatives during the   Iran nuclear talks at the Vienna International Center in ViennaA bill extending U.S. sanctions against Iran for 10 years will become law without President Barack Obama's signature, but will not affect implementation of the international accord limiting Iran's nuclear program, the White House said on Thursday. The announcement represents an apparent reversal by the administration, after it said previously Obama would likely sign the act passed by Congress last month extending some sanctions on Tehran and also making it easier to reimpose others lifted under the 2015 nuclear pact. "This Administration has made clear that an extension of the Iran Sanctions Act, while unnecessary, is entirely consistent with our commitments in the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).




Turkey could hold referendum on stronger presidency in March
12:06:28 PM

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan leaves the police   headquaters in his car after a ceremony for police officers who died in   Saturday's blasts, in Istanbul, TurkeyBy Ercan Gurses and Orhan Coskun ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey may hold a referendum as early as March on constitutional changes to expand the president's powers, a senior ruling party lawmaker said, a move that would help Tayyip Erdogan acquire the executive presidency he has long sought. The ruling AK Party over the weekend submitted to parliament a 21-article package of constitutional reform proposals, aiming to hold a referendum on the package by spring. The constitutional commission is due to discuss the package next week and debate in parliament is likely to follow in January, according to Mustafa Sentop, the head of parliament's constitutional commission.




Israel's parliament moves to quell anger over short skirt ban
11:46:10 AM
By Jeffrey Heller JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel's parliament speaker went on national radio on Thursday to try to quell anger over a ban on female staff wearing skirts deemed too short, a move that has caused a scandal in a legislature where informal dress has long been the fashion. The furore began about 10 days ago when Knesset security guards began turning away women they accused of being dressed immodestly, even though the rules do not specify a skirt length. The lawmaker, Professor Manuel Trajtenberg, complained that soon women would "have to wear burkas".


Somali militants cut off hands of two accused thieves - al Shabaab
11:41:56 AM
By Feisal Omar MOGADISHU (Reuters) - Al Shabaab militants cut off the right hands of two alleged thieves in a region of Somalia controlled by the al Qaeda- affiliated group, a senior al Shabaab official said on Thursday. The Islamist movement has been fighting for years to drive out African Union peacekeepers, topple Somalia's Western-backed central government and impose its brand of sharia (Islamic law) in the Horn of Africa country. Two men, Farah Bile Mohamud and Quri Osman Abdi, admitted at a trial to stealing money from a shop and a judge ordered the right hands of both to be cut off, the al Shabaab governor of the Galgadud region, Sheikh Hassan Ali, told Reuters.


Businesswoman daughter of Mozambique's Guebuza murdered
11:33:52 AM
Valentina Guebuza, the influential businesswoman daughter of former Mozambican President Armando Guebuza, was shot dead by her husband in their apartment in a wealthy neighbourhood of the capital, Mozambican police said on Thursday. Guebuza, a member of the ruling Frelimo party's Central Committee and ranked as one of Africa's most powerful women, was rushed to hospital after being shot four times but died en route, police spokesman Orlando Mudumane said. A South Africa-trained civil engineer, Guebuza held prominent positions in the telecommunications and banking sectors and led several family businesses.


Massachusetts tiptoes into pot legalisation; OK to smoke, not to sell
11:16:45 AM

Section Grower Blenk inspects a marijuana plant clone   before planting it at Tweed Marijuana Inc in Smith's FallsBy Scott Malone BOSTON (Reuters) - Massachusetts on Thursday became the first state in the densely populated U.S. Northeast to legalise marijuana for recreational use, a step that advocates say could help spread the drug's acceptance across the United States. Massachusetts is now one of eight U.S. states that have legalised use of the drug for recreational use since voters in Washington and Colorado first approved the idea in 2012. Distances between cities in the Northeast are smaller than in the West, leading some to suggest Massachusetts' move could motivate neighboring states to consider similar steps, given how easy it will be for people to cross state lines to acquire the drug.




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