Yahoo! News: Terrorism
Yahoo! News: Terrorism |
- Vermont's Sanders kicks off 2016 bid
- Floodwaters deepen in Houston after city gets more rain
- What would White House be like without a dog?
- Cleveland, Justice Department announce police settlement
- Appeals panel won't lift hold on Obama immigration action
- Governor says deadly flooding is worst ever seen in Texas area
- Data thieves gain access to 100,000 U.S. taxpayers' information: IRS
- Colorado movie gunman wrote of 'obsession to kill' since childhood
- Joint Chiefs Chairman says U.S. blindsided by fall of Mosul
- Iraq begins operation to oust Islamic State from Anbar
- Lawyer says allegations B.B. King was poisoned 'ridiculous'
- Washington Post reporter on trial in Iran for spying
Vermont's Sanders kicks off 2016 bid Posted: 26 May 2015 04:30 PM PDT |
Floodwaters deepen in Houston after city gets more rain Posted: 26 May 2015 04:36 PM PDT |
What would White House be like without a dog? Posted: |
Cleveland, Justice Department announce police settlement Posted: 26 May 2015 04:54 PM PDT |
Appeals panel won't lift hold on Obama immigration action Posted: 26 May 2015 03:42 PM PDT |
Governor says deadly flooding is worst ever seen in Texas area Posted: 26 May 2015 04:36 PM PDT By Jim Forsyth SAN ANTONIO (Reuters) - Texas Governor Greg Abbott on Monday likened the ferocity of flash flooding that killed at least three people to a tsunami, and authorities said a dam had given way in a state park. Abbott declared states of disaster in 24 counties and flew over the area south of Austin to assess the damage caused by tornadoes, heavy rainfall, thunderstorms and flooding that forced evacuations and rooftop rescues and left thousands of residents without electricity. "This is the biggest flood this area of Texas has ever seen," Abbott said. |
Data thieves gain access to 100,000 U.S. taxpayers' information: IRS Posted: 26 May 2015 03:09 PM PDT (Reuters) - Tax return information for about 100,000 U.S. taxpayers was illegally accessed by cyber criminals over the past four months, U.S. IRS Commissioner John Koskinen said on Tuesday, the latest in a series of data thefts that have alarmed American consumers. From February to May, attackers sought to gain access to personal tax information 200,000 times through the agency's "Get Transcript" online application, which calls up information from previous returns, he told a news conference. The breach did not affect any IRS data outside the "Get Transcript" application, and the agency said it would strengthen its security measures. |
Colorado movie gunman wrote of 'obsession to kill' since childhood Posted: 26 May 2015 04:44 PM PDT By Keith Coffman CENTENNIAL, Colo., (Reuters) - Colorado cinema gunman James Holmes wrote in a notebook he sent to his psychiatrist prior to opening fire in a suburban theater that he had harbored an "obsession to kill" since childhood, a police officer testified at his murder trial on Tuesday. Holmes mailed a package to the psychiatrist that included the notebook a day before he opened fire inside a cinema in the Denver suburb of Aurora during a screening of the Batman film "The Dark Knight Rises." Prosecutors have said they will seek the death penalty for Holmes if he is convicted of killing 12 moviegoers and wounding 70 others in the July 2012 rampage. Aurora Police Sergeant Matthew Fyles read aloud excerpts from the 29-page notebook, in which Holmes allegedly wrote: "The obsession to kill since I was a kid, with age became more realistic." Fyles said that Holmes wrote in another entry that he had thought about multiple ways to kill, including with nuclear weapons and biological warfare. |
Joint Chiefs Chairman says U.S. blindsided by fall of Mosul Posted: 26 May 2015 05:36 AM PDT |
Iraq begins operation to oust Islamic State from Anbar Posted: 26 May 2015 11:31 AM PDT |
Lawyer says allegations B.B. King was poisoned 'ridiculous' Posted: 26 May 2015 02:38 AM PDT |
Washington Post reporter on trial in Iran for spying Posted: 26 May 2015 01:20 PM PDT Washington Post correspondent Jason Rezaian went on trial behind closed doors in Iran Tuesday on charges of spying, in a case that has clouded a rapprochement with the United States. The United States blasted the trial's "complete lack of transparency", and renewed calls for Tehran to drop "absurd" spying charges that Rezaian's brother called "laughable". Rezaian's wife, Yeganeh Salehi, who is also a journalist, appeared in court alongside her husband and a female press photographer, Iran's official IRNA news agency reported. |
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