Yahoo! News: World - China
Yahoo! News: World - China |
- Death toll rises to 50 in massive blasts at Chinese port
- The myth of Trump’s angry legions
- Despite order, office refuses to issue gay marriage license
- At least 50 dead as huge warehouse blasts hit Chinese port
- State of emergency in Ferguson, Missouri, extended at least 24 hours
- Judge OKs settlement with families of Newtown massacre victims
- Connecticut's top court bans death penalty in state
- One-on-one with U.S. ambassador to Chile
Death toll rises to 50 in massive blasts at Chinese port Posted: 13 Aug 2015 09:34 AM PDT |
The myth of Trump’s angry legions Posted: |
Despite order, office refuses to issue gay marriage license Posted: 13 Aug 2015 02:48 PM PDT |
At least 50 dead as huge warehouse blasts hit Chinese port Posted: 13 Aug 2015 08:21 AM PDT |
State of emergency in Ferguson, Missouri, extended at least 24 hours Posted: 13 Aug 2015 01:47 PM PDT The government of St. Louis County extended for at least 24 hours a state of emergency in Ferguson, Missouri, which has been the scene of protests a year after an unarmed black teenager was killed by a white police officer. County Executive Steve Stenger extended the state of emergency in Ferguson, a suburb of the city of St. Louis, through at least Friday, said his spokeswoman, Allison Blood. In consultation with police, Stenger put the state of emergency in place on Monday for Ferguson and surrounding areas after police officers shot and critically wounded a man in an exchange of gunfire Sunday night, marring what had been a day of peaceful demonstrations. |
Judge OKs settlement with families of Newtown massacre victims Posted: 13 Aug 2015 02:10 PM PDT A Connecticut judge on Thursday approved the largest portion yet of a settlement in which the estate of the mother of the gunman who carried out a 2012 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary school will pay out $1.5 million to families of 16 victims. Probate Court Judge Joseph Egan in Bethel, Connecticut approved deals with the families of six of the 20 first-graders killed in the Dec. 14, 2012, rampage, according to a court clerk and attorneys who were present at the closed hearing. Two survivors of the attack, which also killed six educators, joined the initial lawsuit but were not part of the final settlement, which represents the amount of a homeowners' insurance policy that gunman 20-year-old Adam Lanza's mother had held on her Newton, Connecticut home. |
Connecticut's top court bans death penalty in state Posted: 13 Aug 2015 01:48 PM PDT The New England state is the latest to back away from the death penalty, following Nebraska earlier this year and Maryland in 2013. The decision followed a 2012 state law that abolished capital punishment for crimes committed after that date but allowed it to be imposed for crimes previously committed. "We are persuaded that, following its prospective abolition, this state's death penalty no longer comports with contemporary standards of decency and no longer serves any legitimate penological purpose," Connecticut Supreme Court justices wrote in Thursday's ruling. |
One-on-one with U.S. ambassador to Chile Posted: |
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