2011年11月2日星期三

Yahoo! News: Terrorism

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: Terrorism


Fed: 4 men got terror ideas from underground novel (AP)

Posted: 02 Nov 2011 03:13 PM PDT

Dan Roberts, left, and Frederick Thomas are shown in this artist rendering as he appear in a federal courtroom in Gainesville, Ga., Wednesday, Nov. 2, 2011. The two and two other men are accused of planning a terror attack.  (AP Photo/Richard Miller)AP - In the violent underground novel "Absolved," right-wing militia members upset about gun control make war against the U.S. government. This week, federal prosecutors accused four elderly Georgia men of plotting to use the book as a script for a real-life wave of terror and assassination involving explosives and the highly lethal poison ricin.


NY jury convicts notorious Russian arms dealer (AP)

Posted: 02 Nov 2011 02:25 PM PDT

FILE - This Nov. 16, 2010, file photo, provided by the Drug Enforcement Administration shows Viktor Bout being led off a flight from Bangkok to New York during his extradition to face trial on charges of transporting tons of weapons that inflamed violence across the world's war zones. A jury in New York found the Russian arms dealer guilty on all counts Wednesday, Nov. 2, 2011.  (AP Photo/Drug Enforcement Administration, File)AP - A notorious Russian arms dealer accused of evading authorities for years while fueling violence in war zones around the globe was convicted Wednesday in swift fashion in a U.S. courtroom on charges he conspired to sell weaponry to South American terrorists.


Subcommittee authorizes Homeland Security subpoena (AP)

Posted: 02 Nov 2011 01:15 PM PDT

AP - A House subcommittee on Wednesday authorized a subpoena against the Homeland Security Department for information about illegal immigrants who have been identified but not deported.

Strife continues over remains of 9/11 victims (AP)

Posted: 02 Nov 2011 05:57 AM PDT

FILE - In this Sept. 10, 2011 file photo, Rosemary Cain, center, of Massapequa, N.Y., who lost her son, FDNY firefighter George Cain, while responding to the 9/11 attacks at ground zero, stands with Sally Regenhard, left, who lost her son, FDNY firefighter Christian Regenhard, and FDNY firefighter John Darcy, right, during a wreath laying ceremony to honor of over 6,000 human remains of their loved ones which are housed in a temporary structure at Memorial Park in New York.  The group objects to a plan where the city of New York and the administration of the national Sept. 11 memorial and museum plan to put those remains in a room below ground that would share space with the museum. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle, File)AP - An emotionally laden debate over the future resting place of thousands of unidentified remains of Sept. 11 victims is lingering as the attacks' 10th anniversary recedes, with several relatives saying they aren't satisfied with a recent city effort to spread the word about a plan to house the remains in the forthcoming 9/11 museum.


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