Yahoo! News: World - China
Yahoo! News: World - China |
- Clinton says family paid State Dept employee for email work
- Rally to support defiant clerk jailed over marriage licenses
- Candy and cuddly toys: Migrants finish epic trek to Germany
- Hundreds gather at jail for Kentucky clerk held in gay marriage dispute
- Prosecutors seek to re-argue case that ended Connecticut death penalty
- Judge upholds Arizona's 'show your papers' immigration law
- Patriots star Tom Brady breaks silence on deflate-gate
Clinton says family paid State Dept employee for email work Posted: 05 Sep 2015 02:17 PM PDT |
Rally to support defiant clerk jailed over marriage licenses Posted: 05 Sep 2015 01:42 PM PDT |
Candy and cuddly toys: Migrants finish epic trek to Germany Posted: 05 Sep 2015 12:44 PM PDT |
Hundreds gather at jail for Kentucky clerk held in gay marriage dispute Posted: 05 Sep 2015 11:33 AM PDT Up to 500 supporters gathered outside a Kentucky jail on Saturday to support a county clerk held there for defying a federal judge's order to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis, 49, who refused the licenses due to her Christian belief that marriage can only be between a man and a woman, said she was prepared to remain in jail where she has been reading a Bible since her incarceration for contempt on Thursday, her lawyers said. On Saturday, a white banner spray-painted with the black letters "Kim Davis POW" was placed near the entrance of the jail in Grayson, Kentucky, and a bagpipe and drum corps played "You're a Grand Old Flag" and marched to a field across from the jail. |
Prosecutors seek to re-argue case that ended Connecticut death penalty Posted: 05 Sep 2015 12:07 PM PDT Connecticut prosecutors asked the state Supreme Court on Friday to reconsider its recent decision on a narrow vote to end the state's death penalty, a clerk for the state Supreme Court said. The ruling, on a 4-3 vote, added Connecticut to the growing list of states backing away from the death penalty, including Nebraska and Maryland most recently. Thirty-one states have the death penalty. |
Judge upholds Arizona's 'show your papers' immigration law Posted: 05 Sep 2015 02:34 PM PDT The ruling by U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton on Friday was on the last of seven challenges to the 2010 law. The section being upheld allows police in Arizona to check the immigration status of anyone they stop. Bolton ruled that immigration rights activists failed to show that police would enforce the law differently for Hispanics than other people. |
Patriots star Tom Brady breaks silence on deflate-gate Posted: |
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