Yahoo! News: Terrorism
Yahoo! News: Terrorism |
- Baltimore violence evokes 1968 riots after MLK assassination
- Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders to announce 2016 presidential run
- Supreme Court hears historic gay marriage arguments
- Thousands of police descend on Baltimore to enforce curfew after riots
- Commission approves policy for Los Angeles police body cameras
- Court dismisses appeal in $1 billion divorce of oil executive Hamm
- Iran diverts Marshall Islands cargo ship in Strait of Hormuz
- Baltimore riot shows 'crisis' in community policing: Obama
- Near Nepal quake epicenter, desperate villagers await help
- Gay marriage: Where the 2016 candidates stand
- The speech that put Chuck Robb ahead of history on gay marriage
- Sen. Lindsey Graham: Send U.S. troops to topple Assad
Baltimore violence evokes 1968 riots after MLK assassination Posted: 28 Apr 2015 12:12 PM PDT |
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders to announce 2016 presidential run Posted: |
Supreme Court hears historic gay marriage arguments Posted: 28 Apr 2015 08:17 AM PDT |
Thousands of police descend on Baltimore to enforce curfew after riots Posted: 28 Apr 2015 04:34 PM PDT By Ian Simpson and Warren Strobel BALTIMORE (Reuters) - As night falls on Baltimore on Tuesday, thousands of police and National Guard troops fanned out to enforce a new curfew and prevent further violence as the mayor fended off criticism that she responded sluggishly to a night of rioting, looting and fires. More than 3,000 police from Maryland, New Jersey and the District of Columbia, and National Guard members in helmets, took up posts in front of businesses and hospitals in Baltimore a day after the worst rioting in the United States in years. Shops were looted, buildings burned to the ground, 20 officers injured and police arrested more than 250 people in the violence that erupted following Monday's funeral of a 25-year-old black man who died in a hospital on April 19 a week after sustaining injuries in police custody. For nearly a week after Gray died from a spinal injury, protests in Baltimore had been peaceful and Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said she acted cautiously on Monday because she wanted to avoid a heavy-handed response that would incite more violence. |
Commission approves policy for Los Angeles police body cameras Posted: 28 Apr 2015 03:13 PM PDT By Alex Dobuzinskis LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The Los Angeles Police Commission approved a policy on Tuesday clearing the way for the widespread use of body cameras by patrol officers in the second-largest U.S. city, as tensions rise in the United States over police use-of-force incidents. Mayor Eric Garcetti said in December the city would equip 7,000 Los Angeles Police Department officers with the devices over the next two years to capture their day-to-day interactions with civilians. The commission's 3-1 vote on rules governing the use of the devices brings Los Angeles closer to becoming the largest U.S. city to put body cameras into widespread use. Officials are also testing the use of body cameras by officers in Baltimore, which on Monday saw riots following several days of protests over the death of a black man who suffered a fatal spine injury while in police custody. |
Court dismisses appeal in $1 billion divorce of oil executive Hamm Posted: 28 Apr 2015 01:18 PM PDT (Reuters) - Sue Ann Arnall, the ex-wife of Oklahoma oil executive Harold Hamm, lost an appeal of the couple's divorce case because she had accepted an award of nearly $1 billion, the state Supreme Court said on Tuesday. In a 7-2 decision, the court ruled in favor of a motion filed in January by Hamm, chief executive officer of oil company Continental Resources Inc, to dismiss Arnall's appeal. In its ruling, the Oklahoma Supreme Court allowed his appeal to proceed despite dismissing Arnall's. Craig Box, a lawyer for Hamm, said he had not read the opinion yet. Last November, an Oklahoma district court ordered Hamm to pay his ex-wife about $1 billion in cash and assets when the couple divorced after a 26-year marriage. |
Iran diverts Marshall Islands cargo ship in Strait of Hormuz Posted: 28 Apr 2015 10:03 AM PDT |
Baltimore riot shows 'crisis' in community policing: Obama Posted: 28 Apr 2015 10:09 AM PDT President Obama condemned rioting in Baltimore, saying there was "no excuse" for the violence, but acknowledged a "slow-rolling crisis" in community policing, especially in treatment of African Americans. "We have seen too many instances of what appears to be police officers interacting with individuals -- primarily African American, often poor -- in ways that raise troubling questions," Obama told reporters at the White House. "I think there are police departments that have to do some soul-searching. Obama was reacting to the violence that erupted in Baltimore after the funeral of Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old African American man who died after suffering a spine injury while in police custody. |
Near Nepal quake epicenter, desperate villagers await help Posted: 28 Apr 2015 01:44 PM PDT |
Gay marriage: Where the 2016 candidates stand Posted: |
The speech that put Chuck Robb ahead of history on gay marriage Posted: |
Sen. Lindsey Graham: Send U.S. troops to topple Assad Posted: |
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