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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • 22
    May
    2013
    10:06am, EDT

    Captain of luxury Costa Concordia cruise ship to face trial over deadly wreck

    Tiziana Fabi / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Costa Concordia captain Francesco Schettino leaves after a session of the trial in the Costa Concordia cruise ship disaster on April 15, 2013 in Grosseto.

    By Claudio Lavanga, Correspondent, NBC News

    ROME -- He was judged guilty by public opinion after his cruise ship, the Costa Concordia, capsized off the tiny Italian island of Giglio last year, killing 32 people and leaving thousands traumatized. Now Captain Francesco Schettino will face justice in a court of law.

    A judge in Grosseto, a town in Tuscany, announced Wednesday that there was enough evidence to try Schettino for manslaughter, causing a shipwreck and abandoning ship while 4,200 passengers and crew were still aboard. Schettino denies the charges.

    The Costa Concordia ran aground in January 2012 as it passed very close to the island's shore. It was one of the most high-profile shipwrecks since the sinking of the Titanic in 1912.

    Slideshow: Luxury cruise ship runs aground

    /

    The Costa Concordia, carrying more than 4,200 passengers, ran aground Jan. 13 off the coast of Italy killing 32 people - including two Americans.

    Launch slideshow

    Schettino will be the only defendant in the trial, which will begin on July 9 in Grosseto. Five other defendants have sought plea bargains in separate cases.

    Schettino's defense team tried to convince Judge Paolo Molino to drop the charge of abandonment of ship, one of the worst and most embarrassing offenses for a captain. But Molino ruled there was enough evidence to suggest the captain left the cruise liner voluntarily hours before the last passenger was rescued, rather than falling off the ship accidentally as he initially claimed.

    "I can only tell you that anyone who has been in a position of authority would feel very, very depressed, exactly as he feels," said Francesco Pepe, Schettino's lawyer. 

    He could face up to 20 years in prison if convicted, according to his lawyer.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Full coverage of the Costa Concordia disaster on NBCNews.com

    78 comments

    He is responsible for 32 deaths and the most he'll get is 20 years? He's never taken responsibility for what he did....telling lie after lie. What a disgusting human being!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, trial, cruise-ship, shipwreck, featured, costa-concordia, giglio, francesco-schettino
  • 11
    May
    2013
    7:34am, EDT

    Egypt's ousted Mubarak back in court over murder of protesters in Arab Spring

    AFP - Getty Images

    An image grab taken from Egyptian state TV shows ousted Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak sitting behind bars during his retrial at the Police Academy in Cairo on Saturday.

    By Alexander Dziadosz and Yasmine Saleh, Reuters

    CAIRO -- Former president Hosni Mubarak was back in court on Saturday for a retrial on charges of complicity in the murder of protesters, reopening a case that has shown the difficulty of transitional justice in post-revolutionary Egypt.

    Mubarak and his former interior minister, Habib el-Adli, were convicted and sentenced to life in prison last June for failing to stop the killing during the 2011 uprising that swept him from power.

    The retrial was ordered after a court in January accepted appeals from the prosecution and the defense.

    Mubarak, 85, sat upright on a hospital gurney as he was wheeled into a cage where the defendants appear. Dressed in white prison uniforms, his two sons, Alaa and Gamal, stood alongside him. They face charges of corruption.

    Wearing dark, aviator sunglasses, the deposed autocrat raised his arm to confirm his presence as Judge Ahmed al-Rasheedy read a list of the accused. "Present," said Mubarak. He waved his arm in denial when asked by the judge for his response to the charges read out by the prosecution.

    The session was broadcast live on state television.

    Held at a police academy on the outskirts of Cairo under tight security, the retrial had been due to begin last month but was aborted when the previous judge recused himself.

    Mubarak is being held at Tora Prison on the outskirts of Cairo. He remains in jail despite release orders because he faces charges in a separate corruption case.

    Mubarak, Adli and four of his former top aides are accused of involvement in the killing of more than 800 protesters who died in the 18-day uprising. Two other Interior Ministry officials face lesser charges.

    First ruler toppled in Arab Spring
    Mubarak's imprisonment last June was a historic moment -- he was the first ruler toppled by the Arab Spring revolts to stand trial in person.

    Slideshow: Egypt's revolution and the fall of Mubarak

    Ahmed Youssef / EPA

    Eighteen days of popular protest culminated in the downfall of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak on Feb. 11, 2011.

    Launch slideshow

    But the case exposed the difficulties of attaining justice in a country whose judiciary and security forces are still largely controlled by figures appointed during his era.

    The prosecution had complained that the Interior Ministry had failed to cooperate in providing evidence.

    Adli's four aides were exonerated due to the weakness of the evidence, and the judge convicted Mubarak and Adli on the grounds of their failure to stop the killing, rather than actually ordering it.

    Outside the court, a small group of protesters gathered under a baking sun held aloft banners demanding justice.

    "Your mother misses you, Ahmed," read one banner, referring to a demonstrator killed in 2011. A rival group of a dozen Mubarak loyalists held aloft pictures of the former president dressed in military uniform and business suits.

    Many Egyptians have been frustrated by the failure of courts to bring officials to account for the violence during the uprising and for what they see as decades of corruption and police abuses preceding it.

    On Wednesday, an appeals court refused the prosecution's appeal of a verdict that exonerated two dozen defendants over an incident during the revolt in which men on camels and horses attacked protesters in Cairo's Tahrir Square.

    Related:

    • 'There is no food': Post-revolutionary economic turmoil dashes hopes in Egypt
    • Some Egyptians warm to jailed former president Mubarak ahead of trial
    • Video: Egyptian women reveal horror of sexual assaults
    • Full Egypt coverage on NBCNews.com
    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    25 comments

    Has too much of religion done good anytime and anywhere? Here Islam is the worst one from its track record.

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  • Updated
    6
    May
    2013
    6:54pm, EDT

    'Hitler child' goes on trial in Germany for 10 racist murders

    In Germany, a woman accused of being part of a neo-Nazi group has gone on trial charged with involvement in a series of murders. Beate Zschaepe is accused of being part of the National Socialist Underground which murdered 10 people between 2000 and 2007. For years authorities thought the killings were linked to the Turkish Mafia. The government now faces questions about racism in Germany and how the police and intelligence services got it wrong. Paraic O'Brien Channel Four Europe reports.

    By Alexandra Hudson, Reuters

    MUNICH, Germany - The surviving member of a neo-Nazi cell went on trial on Monday for a series of racist murders that scandalized Germany and exposed authorities' inability or reluctance to recognize right-wing hate crime.

    The chance discovery of the gang, the National Socialist Underground (NSU), which had gone undetected for more than a decade, has forced Germany to acknowledge it has a more militant and dangerous neo-Nazi fringe than previously thought.

    Beate Zschaepe, 38, is charged with complicity in the murder of eight Turks, a Greek and a German policewoman between 2000 and 2007, as well as two bombings in immigrant areas of Cologne and 15 bank robberies.

    A high-profile neo-Nazi murder trial has opened in Germany, with the five accused appearing in public for the first time since their arrest. NBCNews.com's Richard Lui reports.

    "With its historical, social and political dimensions, the NSU trial is one of the most significant of post-war German history," lawyers for the family of the first victim, flower seller Enver Simsek, said in a statement.

    The case has shaken a country that believed it had learned the lessons of the past, and reopened a debate about whether it must do more to tackle the far-right and lingering racism.

    Zschaepe, wearing a black jacket and white shirt, chatted with her lawyers before the judges entered, her back turned to the television cameras. One of four other defendants charged with assisting the NSU hid under a dark hood.

    Stephan Jansen / EPA

    A Turkish woman who tried forcibly to enter the court building where Beate Zschaepe is being tried is arrested by police in Munich, Germany, on Monday.

    Outside the courthouse, German-Turkish community groups and anti-racism demonstrators held up banners including one that read: "Hitler child Zschaepe, you will pay for your crimes".

    About 500 police officers provided tight security. Members of the public and media, who lined up before dawn for a chance to attend, even had their hair searched before being allowed in.

    The existence of the gang came to light in November 2011 when the two men believed to have founded the NSU with Zschaepe, Uwe Mundlos and Uwe Boehnhardt, committed suicide after a botched bank robbery and set their caravan ablaze.

    Christof Stache / AFP - Getty Images

    Beate Zschaepe who is charged with complicity in the murders of eight ethnic Turks, a Greek immigrant and a German policewoman between 2000 and 2007, enters a courtroom in Munich, Germany, on Monday.

    In the charred vehicle, police found the gun used in all 10 murders and a grotesque DVD claiming responsibility for them, in which the bodies of the victims were pictured with a cartoon Pink Panther totting up the number of dead.

    After the suicides, Zschaepe is believed to have set fire to a flat she shared with the men in Zwickau, in east Germany. Four days later, she turned herself in to police in her hometown of Jena, saying: "I'm the one you're looking for."

    For the victims' families, the trial will be the first chance to come face-to-face with Zschaepe, whose blank expression and resolute silence since her arrest have left people struggling to make sense of her motives.

    "The Banality of Evil" read the front page of the newspaper Die Welt. The mass-circulation Bild wrote that Zschaepe "looks like a woman at the supermarket till" rather than someone "rabidly mad or explosive".

    Few expect Zschaepe to explain herself at the trial. The Norwegian anti-immigrant mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people in 2011, wrote to Zschaepe last year addressing her as "Dear Sister" and urging her to use the trial to spread far-right ideology.

    Reuters

    Beate Zschaepe, right, is seen with Uwe Boehnhardt of the neo-Nazi group National Socialist Underground in this undated handout picture provided by the German Federal Police.

    Hearings are scheduled into early 2014, with Zschaepe's estranged relatives and the parents of Mundlos and Boehnhardt due to testify.

    As teenagers in Jena, the trio were known to authorities to be involved in racist hate crimes and bomb making, but they escaped arrest and assumed new identities.

    Prosecutors say they hose shopkeepers and small business owners as easy targets to try to hound immigrants out of Germany. Some of the victims' relatives came under suspicion because police simply did not consider a far-right motive.

    "During the investigations they were either treated as suspects, or as relatives of criminals," said lawyer Angelika Lex.

    Parliament is conducting an inquiry into how police and intelligence agencies failed to link the murders or share information about the far-right threat.

    Related:

    • 'Nazi Bride' case highlights rising influence of women in far-right movement
    • A retired teacher's courageous campaign: Tackling neo-Nazi hate


    This story was originally published on Sun May 5, 2013 10:35 PM EDT

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    777 comments

    Cue the "Nazis were LIB'RUL!!!1!1!one!" nimrods in 3...2...1... And they still haven't answered why, if the NSDAP really was liberal, that Hitler threw liberals in jail even before Jews...

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    Explore related topics: germany, trial, neo-nazi, featured, updated
  • 27
    Apr
    2013
    9:05am, EDT

    North Korea: Detained American tourist to face trial for 'committing crimes'

    By Jane Chung, Reuters

    SEOUL -- North Korea said on Saturday that a Korean-American tourist, jailed by the reclusive state since late last year, will face trial for "committing crimes" against the North, a move that could further stoke tensions with the United States.

    The move comes amid a diplomatic standoff between the North and the United States, and as Pyongyang has threatened to attack U.S. military bases in the Pacific and the South.

    Slideshow: North Korea's young leader, Kim Jong Un

    The youngest son of Kim Jong Il succeeded his late father in 2011, becoming the third member of his family to rule the unpredictable and reclusive communist state.

    Launch slideshow

    A number of U.S. citizens of Korean descent have run into trouble in the North over the years, and Pyongyang has tried to use their detention to extract visits by high-profile American figures, most notably former President Bill Clinton.

    In the latest case, Kenneth Bae, 44, has been held by police since arriving in the northeastern city of Rajin on November 3. He was among a group of five tourists.

    "In the process of investigation he admitted that he committed crimes aimed to topple the DPRK with hostility toward it," KCNA state media reported, using the North's official title of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

    "His crimes were proved by evidence," it said, adding he would soon be taken to the Supreme Court "to face judgment". It did not provide further details.

    South Korean rights workers said that the North's authorities may have taken issue with some of his photographs, including those of homeless North Korean children.

    A South Korean newspaper published by an evangelical family said he may have been carrying footage of North Korea executing defectors and dissidents. It was impossible to verify this.

    According to North Korean law, the punishment for hostile acts against the state is five to 10 years of hard labor.

    Clinton flew to Pyongyang in 2009 and met then-leader Kim Jong-il before securing the release of two American media workers who had been charged with entering the North illegally.

    Former U.N. ambassador Bill Richardson has made numerous trips to North Korea that have included efforts to free detained Americans. He delivered a letter regarding Bae to officials during a trip to North Korea in January, although he was unable to meet Bae.

    Tensions between North Korea and South Korea and its ally the United States have spiraled in recent weeks since the United Nations tightened sanctions after the North's third nuclear weapon test in February.

    The toughening of those sanctions led to the North threatening nuclear strikes against South Korea and the United States.

    North Korea has a long record of making threats to secure concessions from the United States and South Korea, only to repeat the process later. Both the United States and the South have said in recent days that the cycle must cease.

    Slideshow: Glimpses into the hermit kingdom of North Korea

    David Guttenfelder / AP

    As chief Asia photographer for the Associated Press, David Guttenfelder has had unprecedented access to communist North Korea. Here's a rare look at daily life in the secretive country.

    Launch slideshow

    On Friday, Pyongyang rejected a call for formal talks to end a standoff that forced operations at a joint industrial complex shared by the North and South to be halted.

    South Korea in turn said it would pull out all its remaining workers from the Kaesong factory complex, which is just inside North Korea and is one of the North's few sources of ready cash.

    Of the 175 remaining South Korean workers, 126 workers left the factory zone on Saturday. The rest are scheduled to return on Monday.

    A representative of the South Korean firms at the complex urged the government to hold inter-Korean talks and to authorize their visit to North Korea on Tuesday, South Korea's news agency Yonhap said.

    Related stories:

    • North Korea rejects talks with South's 'puppet regime'
    • Analysis: North Korea blinked in missile standoff, but will threaten again
    • Full North Korea coverage on NBCNews.com
    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    298 comments

    Anyone who travels to North Korea for any reason whatsoever has to have death wish, or delusions of invulnerability.

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  • 17
    Apr
    2013
    11:02am, EDT

    Makers of fraudulent PIP breast implants go on trial in France

    Guillaume Horcajuelo / EPA

    Jean Claude Mas, former head of Poly Implant Prothese (PIP), smokes a cigarette Wednesday during a break on the first day of his trial in Marseille, southern France.

    By Jean-François Rosnoblet, Lucien Libert and Alexandria Sage, Reuters

    MARSEILLE, France -- Five French executives faced jeers from victims Wednesday as they went on trial accused of  supplying women with hundreds of thousands of substandard breast implants and triggering a global health scare.

    More than 300,000 women around the world were fitted over a decade with implants from the French company Poly Implant Prothese (PIP), and the trial includes 5,000 civil plaintiffs and 300 lawyers.

    PIP's founder and chief executive, 73-year-old Jean-Claude Mas, has admitted filling the implants with an unapproved homemade recipe made of industrial-grade silicone gel.

    Mas and four PIP executives, including the chief financial officer, are charged with aggravated fraud and risk maximum prison terms of five years each, plus fines, for selling the implants around the world from 2001 to 2010, when they were ordered off the market.

    A vast exhibition building close to PIP's former premises has been set up as a makeshift courtroom to accommodate the huge crowds expected for the trial, due to last until May 14.

    Mas arrived at court under police escort and faced a crush of cameras as the trial began in the southern city of Marseille.

    "Bastard!" shouted someone in the audience of some 300 victims as Mas appeared live on a giant video screen.

    Of the more than 5,000 individual lawsuits filed against PIP -- once the world's third-largest supplier of breast implants -- and its executives, 220 have come from women outside France.

    A French woman who alleges that one of her PIP implants began to leak four years after their insertion said outside the courtroom that victims were both scared and angry.

    "We had foreign bodies put inside us that were flawed ... we could have maybe died from it. The anger is because we were tricked," said Tomassine Catalano. "It's frightening."

    Rush for removal
    The scandal -- revealed after inspectors pursuing a tip-off discovered vats of industrial-grade silicone outside the PIP factory in 2010 -- sparked worldwide panic when the government recommended removal of the implants due to an abnormally high rupture rate.

    The man whose breast implant company Poly Implant Prothese (PIP) which used non-medical grade silicone, and sparked an international health scandal is under arrest, and could be charged with manslaughter.  Jean-Claude Mas was arrested at his home in southern France.  ITN's Sally Biddulph reports.  

    Health experts say no link has been established between PIP implants and breast cancer, but in the months after the scandal broke, plastic surgeons around the world reported a flood of removal requests from worried patients.

    Half the French women with PIP implants, or nearly 15,000, have already opted for removal, whether because of rupture or as a precaution, according to the government.

    Mas was released in October from eight months in detention following a failure to post bail. He told police that 75 percent of PIP's implants had contained the homemade gel, which was never been approved by regulators, although he denies it was unsafe. He and the other executives deny the charges.

    Investigators estimate that Mas's formula allowed PIP to save nearly $1.6 million in one year alone.

    On Wednesday, hoots erupted in court when Mas said he lived on a modest monthly retirement income of $2,350, prompting the judge to warn that the next person to disrupt proceedings would be thrown out.

    Minutes before the trial began, a court in Paris rejected a defense request to have the case thrown out.

    Mas and CFO Claude Couty are separately implicated in a civil case over fiscal fraud that has yet to reach trial. Mas is also under investigation for manslaughter following a complaint from the mother of a French woman with PIP implants who died of cancer in 2010.

    Related:

    France arrests breast implant boss amid scare

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    10 comments

    Jean, please pass the Jelly. Oh don't call my secret booby filler plain old jelly, he will get sentenced to a resort prison commune complete with a winery........

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  • 4
    Apr
    2013
    1:37pm, EDT

    Ruby the Heart Stealer denies sleeping with Berlusconi, admits lying to him

    Giuseppe Cacace / AFP - Getty Images

    Exotic dancer Karima El Mahroug, nicknamed Ruby the Heart Stealer, speaks to journalists at Milan's courthouse on Thursday during a protest against the trial of former Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi.

    By Manuela D'Alessandro, Reuters

    MILAN -- The nightclub dancer at the center of former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's sex trial staged a dramatic protest outside the court on Thursday, alleging that she had been unfairly pressured as part of a campaign against him.

    Karima El Mahroug's emotional statement in defense of Berlusconi followed a protest by parliamentarians from his party outside the court last month as the media magnate tries to have the trial moved away from Milan.

    The charges against Berlusconi, which he denies, include paying for sex with El Mahroug -- better known by her stage name "Ruby the Heart Stealer" -- when she was a minor.

    She has always denied being a prostitute or having sex with the 76-year-old billionaire during the now-notorious "bunga bunga" parties at his villa outside Milan, where numerous witnesses have said she was a regular guest.

    Carrying a large sign reading "The Ruby case: Are you not interested in the truth any more?" she said she had been used as part of a deliberate campaign against Berlusconi by magistrates and sections of the press.

    "Today I realize that there is a war under way against him that I do not feel part of, but which has dragged me in and injures me," she said, reading a prepared statement. "I do not want to be a victim of this situation."

    El Mahroug demanded to be allowed to testify in open court but declined to explain to reporters why she had not appeared at previous hearings. As recently as December, she failed to appear in court, later turning up in Mexico, where she said she was on holiday.

    The trial has been suspended while judges consider Berlusconi's request to transfer it away from Milan, where he says magistrates are waging a vendetta against him. The next hearing is due on April 22.

    Berlusconi is also appealing against a four-year sentence for tax fraud, and his legal problems further complicate the political standoff that arose when elections in February left no party able to form a government.

    Pretended Egypt leader was her uncle
    El Mahroug, her voice breaking at times, said she had been publicly humiliated by the implication that she was a prostitute and said that investigators had exploited her vulnerability to attack Berlusconi, leader of Italy's main center-right party.

    Karima el Marough, better known as "Ruby the Heart Stealer," was called to testify over allegations that former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi paid to have sex with her when she was still a minor. NBC's Claudio Lavanga reports.

    She said she faced "real and genuine psychological torture" from magistrates once they realized that she would not provide evidence against Berlusconi.

    "I felt used by sections of the press and judges which had a common objective, to hurt people who had helped me," she said.

    "My suffering is also the fault of those judges ... who described me as a prostitute even though I always denied having sexual relations for money and above all having them with Silvio Berlusconi."

    As well as the charge of paying for sex with a person under the age of 18 years, Berlusconi is also accused of abusing the powers of his office by getting El Mahroug released from custody in 2010 when she was held on an unrelated theft charge.

    Prosecutors say Berlusconi asked police to release her because he thought she was a niece of former Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak.

    However, El Mahroug admitted to having made this up, saying she had created a "parallel life" as she tried to imagine a different life from the poverty-stricken world in which she grew up.

    "I'm sorry to have told these lies to Silvio Berlusconi as well, who I am sure today would be ready to help me even if I had told the truth," she said. 

    Related:

    'Ruby the Heart Stealer' shows up in court for Berlusconi sex trial

    Berlusconi to 'Ruby the Heart Stealer': 'I'll cover you in gold ... just don't say anything'

    Woman dressed as burlesque Obama for Berlusconi, court told

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    19 comments

    Actually, what she really meant was..."I DID NOT sleep with him!! My eyes were wide open all the time?!" :-)

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  • Updated
    26
    Mar
    2013
    2:48am, EDT

    Italy court to decide whether Amanda Knox should be tried again for murder

    In the six years since Seattle student Amanda Knox was tried for murder in Italy, she was convicted, spent four years in jail, and was finally acquitted. In a new twist, prosecutors are asking the court to try the case again. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

    By Michelle Kosinski, NBC News

    ROME -- Italy's highest court was set to decide Tuesday whether to overturn the acquittal of American student Amanda Knox in the murder of her roommate.

    Knox and her then-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito were both convicted and then acquitted of Meredith Kercher's 2007 murder in Perugia, Italy, where they were students.

    Knox spent four years in prison after being found guilty.

    Small-time drug dealer Rudy Hermann Guede, an acquaintance of Knox's, was also convicted and was jailed for 16 years.

    Prosecutors argued that Knox and Sollecito killed Kercher after a drug-fueled sexual assault.

    Slideshow: A murder in Italy

    Oli Scarff / Getty Images

    The long legal saga of Amanda Knox, an American student accused of the violent death of her roommate, British student Meredith Kercher, has made headlines around the world since it began in Perugia, Italy, in late 2007.

    Launch slideshow

    If judges reject the prosecutors' argument that the acquittal should be thrown out and a new trial ordered, Knox's acquittal will be final.

    "The only way the evidence could be characterized was absent, non-existent, inconclusive and unreliable," said Theodore Simon, Knox's defense attorney.

    The scant DNA evidence initially linking Knox and Sollecito the murder was later found to have likely been contaminated. Defense attorneys argued that Guede was the sole killer and that the acquittal was justified.

    Since her release from prison in 2011, Knox has resumed her studies in Seattle.

    Knox and Sollecito did not appear in court Monday.

    Italy's supreme court, which originally was expected to make a decision on Monday, later postponed its ruling until Tuesday.

    Related:

    Amanda Knox leaves prison after murder conviction overturned

    Knox heads home from Italy; prosecutor to appeal verdict

    This story was originally published on Mon Mar 25, 2013 8:41 AM EDT

    373 comments

    Italy must be suffering from the bad economy, and they want another circus with reporters and others flocking to their country and spending tons of money along with the Knox family. Since the evidence is so skimpy, how about they leave her alone and let her live her life.

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    Explore related topics: italy, trial, featured, updated, perugia, amanda-knox, crime-and-courts
  • 13
    Mar
    2013
    11:59pm, EDT

    Khmer Rouge's Ieng Sary dies during Cambodia trial

    Mak Remissa / Pool / EPA File

    Former Khmer Rouge foreign affairs minister Ieng Sary in 2010. Sary, who has been on trial at the UN-backed war crimes court since 2011, died in a Phnom Penh hospital where he had been taken on March 4.

     

    By Sopheng Cheang, The Associated Press

    PHNOM PENH, Cambodia -- Ieng Sary, who co-founded Cambodia's brutal Khmer Rouge movement in 1970s, was its public face abroad and decades later became one of its few leaders to be put on trial for the deaths of an estimated 1.7 million people, died Thursday morning. He was 87.

    His death, however, came before any verdict was reached in his case, dashing hopes among survivors and court prosecutors that he would ever be punished for his alleged war crimes stemming from the darkest chapter in the country's history.

    Ieng Sary was being tried by a joint Cambodian-international tribunal along with two other former Khmer Rouge leaders, both in their 80s, and there are fears that they, too, could also die before justice is served. Ieng Sary's wife, former Social Affairs Minister Ieng Thirith, had also been charged but was ruled unfit to stand trial last year because she suffered from a degenerative mental illness, probably Alzheimer's disease.

    Lars Olsen, a spokesman for the tribunal, confirmed Ieng Sary's death. The cause was not immediately known, but he had suffered from high blood pressure and heart problems and had been admitted to a Phnom Penh hospital March 4 with weakness and severe fatigue. 

    "We are disappointed that we could not complete the proceeding against Ieng Sary," Olsen said, adding the case against his colleagues Nuon Chea, the Khmer Rouge's chief ideologist, and Khieu Samphan, an ex-head of state, will continue and will not be affected.

    Ieng Sary founded the Khmer Rouge with leader Pol Pot, his brother-in-law. The communist regime, which ruled Cambodia from 1975 to 1979, claimed it was building a pure socialist society by evicting people from cities to work in labor camps in the countryside. Its radical policies led to the deaths of an estimated 1.7 million people from starvation, disease, overwork and execution.

    Ieng Sary was foreign minister in the regime, and as its top diplomat became a much more recognizable figure internationally than his secretive colleagues. In 1996, years after the overthrown Khmer Rouge retreated to the jungle, he became the first member of its inner circle to defect, bringing thousands of foot soldiers with him and hastening the movement's final disintegration.

    The move secured him a limited amnesty, temporary credibility as a peacemaker and years of comfortable living in Cambodia, but that vanished as the U.N.-backed tribunal built its case against him.

    The Khmer Rogue came to power through a civil war that toppled a U.S.-backed regime. Ieng Sary then helped persuade hundreds of Cambodian intellectuals to return home from overseas, often to their deaths.

    The returnees were arrested and put in "re-education camps," and most were later executed, said Youk Chhang, director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, an independent group gathering evidence of the Khmer Rouge crimes for the tribunal.

    As a member of the Khmer Rouge's central and standing committee, Ieng Sary "repeatedly and publicly encouraged, and also facilitated, arrests and executions within his Foreign Ministry and throughout Cambodia," Steve Heder said in his co-authored book "Seven Candidates for Prosecution: Accountability for the Crimes of the Khmer Rouge." Heder is a Cambodia scholar who later worked with the U.N.-backed tribunal.

    Known by his revolutionary alias as "Comrade Van," Ieng Sary was a recipient of many internal Khmer Rouge documents detailing torture and mass execution of suspected internal enemies, according to the Documentation Center of Cambodia.

    "We are continuing to wipe out remaining (internal enemies) gradually, no matter if they are opposed to our revolution overtly or covertly," read a cable sent to Ieng Sary in 1978. It was reprinted in an issue of the center's magazine in 2000, apparently proving he had full knowledge of bloody purges.

    "It's clear that he was one of the leaders that was a recipient of information all the way down to the village level," Youk Chhang said.

    Ieng Sary was arrested in 2007, and the trial against him started in late 2011. He faced charges that included crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide.

    Only one other former Khmer Rouge official has been put on trial: former prison chief Kaing Guek Eav, who was sentenced to life in prison.

    Prime Minister Hun Sen has openly opposed additional indictments of former Khmer Rouge figures, some of whom have become his political allies.

    Pol Pot himself died in 1998 in Cambodia's jungles while a prisoner of his own comrades.

    Ieng Sary declined to participate in his trial, demanding that the tribunal consider the pardon he received from Cambodia's king when he defected in 1996. The tribunal, formally known as the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, previously ruled that the pardon does not cover its indictment against him.

    He denied any hand in the atrocities. At a press conference following his defection, he said Pol Pot "was the sole and supreme architect of the party's line, strategy and tactics."

    "Nuon Chea implemented all Pol Pot's decisions to torture and execute those who expressed opposite opinions and those they hated, like intellectuals," Ieng Sary claimed.

    Ieng Sary was born Kim Trang on Oct. 24, 1925, in southern Vietnam. In the early 1950s, he was among many Cambodian students who received government scholarships to study in France, where he also took part in a Marxist circle.

    After returning to Cambodia in 1957, he taught history at an elite high school in the capital, Phnom Penh, while engaging in clandestine communist activities.

    He, Ieng Thirith, Pol Pot and Pol Pot's wife eventually formed the core of the Khmer Rouge movement. Pol Pot's wife, Khieu Ponnary, also was Ieng Thirith's sister; she died in 2003.

    Pol Pot was known as "Brother No. 1", Nuon Chea as "Brother No. 2" and Ieng Sary was "Brother No. 3."

    In August 1979, eight months after the overthrow of the Khmer Rouge by a Vietnam-led resistance, Ieng Sary was sentenced in absentia to death by the court of a Hanoi-installed government that was made up of former Khmer Rouge defectors like Hun Sen, the current prime minister. The show trial also condemned Pol Pot.

    Since he was in charge of the Khmer Rouge guerrilla movement's finances, Ieng Sary was believed to have used his position to amass personal wealth.

    On Aug. 8, 1996, a Khmer Rouge rebel radio broadcast announced a death sentence against him for embezzling millions of dollars that reportedly came from the group's logging and gem business along the border with Thailand. But the charge appeared to be politically inspired, recognition that he was becoming estranged from his comrades-in-arms.

    He struck a peace deal with Hun Sen and days later led a mutiny of thousands of Khmer Rouge fighters to join the government, which was a prelude to the movement's total collapse in 1999.

    As a reward, Hun Sen, who has ruled Cambodia almost unchallenged for the last two decades, secured a royal amnesty for Ieng Sary from then-King Norodom Sihanouk, who himself was a virtual prisoner and lost more than a dozen children and relatives during Khmer Rouge rule. The government also awarded Ieng Sary a diplomatic passport for travel.

    Between his defection and arrest, Ieng Sary lived a comfortable life, dividing time between his opulent villa in Phnom Penh and his home in Pailin, a former Khmer Rouge stronghold in northwestern Cambodia.

    He and some of his former aides in the Khmer Rouge, intellectuals who were in a second generation of the group's leadership, made a short-lived attempt at forming a legal political movement. 

     

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    104 comments

    The fires of Hell will be burning a little hotter than normal with a new inmate arrival!

    Show more
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  • 3
    Mar
    2013
    4:56am, EST

    Former Egypt dictator Mubarak faces April re-trial

    By Ayman Mohyeldin, Correspondent, NBC News

    Secretary of State John Kerry is in Cairo, Egypt to meet with government and opposition leaders as well as business and civil rights leaders while on a nine-day trip overseas. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

    CAIRO - The re-trial of former Egypt’s former president Hosni Mubarak, who was deposed in the Arab Spring revolution of 2011, will begin Apr. 13, it was announced Sunday.

    Mubarak’s former interior minister and six other former government officials will also face re-trial on the same date, Egypt's Appeals Court said.

    The announcement came as Secretary of State John Kerry was due to meet Egypt's new president, Mohamed Morsi, and senior figures in Cairo as part of his first foreign trip.

    Some critics say the U.S. is not changing its policy in Egypt, choosing to back Islamists instead of democracy and human rights. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

    Mubarak, 84, was jailed for life last year for his role in the death of protesters killed by security forces who were trying to thwart the revolution.

    Earlier this year, a court granted Mubarak and his co-accused a re-trial.

    The former western-backed leader was ousted in February 2011 after three decades in power.

    He has been living in a military prison after being taken ill during his first trial. 

    Related:

    Kerry urges Egyptian economic reform on Cairo trip


     

    7 comments

    There seem to be a lot of "buyers remorse" in Egypt these days. Mubark could even be returned to power. That is why the "new" Egypt has got to kill him. I hope the army steps in to protect Mubark.

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  • Updated
    22
    Feb
    2013
    3:08am, EST

    Pistorius bail hearing in chaos as lead detective is axed from case

    Stephane De Sakutin / AFP - Getty Images

    Investigating officer Hilton Botha was removed from the case on Thursday. He allegedly opened fire on a minibus in 2011.

    By Rohit Kachroo and Alastair Jamieson, NBC News

    PRETORIA, South Africa -- Oscar Pistorius' bail hearing descended into chaos Thursday as the lead detective investigating the killing of the Olympian's girlfriend was removed from the case amid attempted murder charges of his own.

    Warrant Officer Hilton Botha is due to appear in court in May accused of opening fire on a minibus taxi in 2011. Charges against him were originally withdrawn but reinstated on Wednesday at the behest of the state prosecutor, police spokesman Brigadier Neville Malila told Reuters.

    The revelation, combined with Botha’s struggle to answer key questions under cross-examination on Wednesday, boosted the confidence of Pistorius’ defense lawyers and his family.

    The prosecution revealed what they call inconsistencies in Oscar Pistorius' defense, further complicating a hearing that has been full of discrepancies. But the prosecution is now facing a surprising hurdle after discovering the chief police investigator is facing charges of attempted murder, damaging his credibility and raising questions about South Africa's police force. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

    "We're going to win," one relative said as the family entered the courtroom at the start of the third day of a hearing examining whether the double-amputee should get bail. The sprinter is accused of the premeditated murder of model Reeva Steenkamp, 29.

    "We're going in the right direction," one of Pistorius' uncles added.

    There was further drama when an unidentified woman addressed the court, saying she wanted Pistorius' mental health to be examined. Her intervention was dismissed.

    Later, there was a brief adjournment because of an unspecified "threat" to the court building. 

    The chaotic scenes in court meant that a bail decision, which had been due on Thursday, was postponed until Friday.

    Dubbed the "Blade Runner," Pistorius maintains he fired into his locked bathroom in a panic over a possible prowler. However, prosecutors say the 26-year-old put on his artificial legs and stalked Steenkamp to the bathroom to kill her.

    As Oscar Pistorius waits to find out whether he will be able to leave jail on bail, his family is continuing to stand by him and the chief investigator of the case may have to step down due to charges of his own, in another case from a few years back. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

    Magistrate Desmond Nair said police had showed a lack of urgency in obtaining phone records, and asked Botha why he had given evidence in English rather than his first language, Afrikaans.

    After discussion of the Botha revelations, lawyers from both sides began making their final arguments.

    Pistorius’ defense lawyer referred to the "poor quality" of evidence gathered by police and said there was no evidence that the sprinter had committed premeditated murder.

    He said Steenkamp spending the night at Pistorius' home was "consistent with a loving relationship.”

    A prosecution lawyer called Pistorius' account of Steenkamp's death "improbable," saying: "The only reason you'd fire four shots is to kill."

    'Stay strong'
    The lawyer said the discovery of bullet cartridges in Pistorius' bathroom suggested a deliberate killing at close range.

    At one stage, Pistorius began sobbing and his brother, Carl, placed a hand on his back to comfort him. He also whispered: "Stay strong."

    Alexander Joe / AFP - Getty Images

    South African Olympic sprinter Oscar Pistorius appears in court on Thursday.

    The prosecution produced a magazine article in which Pistorius talked about having a house in Italy, saying it was evidence that the athlete could easily skip bail and leave South Africa.

    Prosecutors also raised the prospect that Pistorius might interfere with witnesses if released on bail. The court heard that Pistorius allegedly tried to manipulate evidence after a previous incident in which his gun was accidentally fired at a restaurant.

    Magistrate Nair asked if there would be shock if Pistorius was released on bail. A defense lawyer said there were be shock if the athlete was not released, referring to apparent weaknesses in the prosecution case.

    Botha, an experienced detective, testified on Wednesday that a witness heard shouting for an hour coming from the house shortly before the shooting.

    Another witness heard gunshots, saw lights on in the house, heard a woman screaming two or three times, then heard another few shots, Botha said.

    But under cross-examination, Botha admitted one of the witnesses was 1,000 feet away from the house at the time.

    TODAY's Professionals – Star Jones, Donny Deutsch, and Dr. Nancy Snyderman – discuss the topics making headlines today, including whether Oscar Pistorius' claims that his girlfriend's shooting was accidental make sense given the evidence.

    Botha told the court that needles and testosterone were found in the athlete's bedroom.

    Defense lawyer Barry Roux disputed that claim, saying the substance was in fact a herbal remedy and that police had misread the label. State prosecutor Gerrie Nel also had to correct Botha when he initially called the substance "steroids."

    On the first day of the hearing, prosecutors and the defense presented clashing accounts of how and why Pistorius shot Steenkamp.

    A court statement from Pistorius denied "in the strongest terms" that he had deliberately killed the law graduate, adding that the athlete was "deeply in love'' with her, according to Reuters.

    "I had no intention to kill my girlfriend," the statement said.

    Meanwhile, Nike on Thursday said it had suspended its sponsorship of Pistorius.

    “We believe Oscar Pistorius should be afforded due process and we will continue to monitor the situation closely,'” the sportswear company said in a statement.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Lead detective in Pistorius case faces attempted murder charges

    Pistorius' uncle: Olympian is in shock, 'will bounce back'

    Pistorius: I felt 'sense of terror' on night I mistakenly shot girlfriend

     

     

    This story was originally published on Thu Feb 21, 2013 4:12 AM EST

    472 comments

    A beautiful woman was brutally murdered and the Pistorious family relative says,"We're going to win today," as he joined the lawyers. Another article was about how the lead detective on the case is now being charged for a crime as the Pistorious family looks to be preparing their OJ Simpson Defense. …

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    Explore related topics: world, trial, south-africa, featured, blade-runner, updated, oscar-pistorius, crime-courts, reeva-steenkamp
  • 5
    Feb
    2013
    9:59am, EST

    India bus gang-rape trial: Victim's friend gives evidence from wheelchair

    By Annie Banerji, Reuters

    NEW DELHI - The trial of five men charged with gang-raping and murdering a young woman on a bus in New Delhi opened on Tuesday with closed-door testimony from her male friend who appeared at court in a wheelchair, still bearing the scars of injuries from the attack.

    Anindito Mukherjee / EPA

    A Delhi police van arrives at the Delhi Saket court in New Delhi, India, Tuesday.

    The 28-year-old software engineer, who may not be identified, is the prosecution's star witness in a case that has triggered nationwide protests, an intense debate about rampant crime against women in India and tougher anti-rape laws.

    The five accused are Vinay Sharma, a gym assistant, Ram Singh, the bus driver, his brother Mukesh Singh, bus cleaner Akshay Kumar Singh and fruit vendor Pawan Kumar.

    They have pleaded not guilty to charges of rape and murder. A sixth accused is being tried separately as a juvenile.

    Police allege the six attacked the 23-year-old trainee physiotherapist and her friend on the bus as the couple returned home from watching a movie on Dec. 16.

    The woman was repeatedly raped and tortured with a metal bar. The couple were also severely beaten before being thrown onto a road.

    The woman died of internal injuries in a Singapore hospital two weeks later.

    Victim's father: Hang them
    As the trial got under way, the victim's father made a surprise appearance at a news conference organized by the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to call for his daughter's attackers to be hanged.

    At one stage, the friend, defense lawyers and some policemen moved from the courtroom to a courtyard where the bus on which police say the attack took place was parked.

    Journalists saw some of them board the vehicle, which was white with tinted windows and orange curtains. Above the windshield was painted "Praise the Goddess" in Hindi.

    The victim's friend was not seen boarding the bus. The friend's father said later it was the second time his son had seen the bus since the attack.

    Indian authorities have filed rape and murder charges against five men accused of the gang rape of a woman on a New Delhi bus. ITN's Geraint Vincent reports.

    In his statement to police after the assault, the friend said their attackers had asked "where are you going with a girl so late at night?" before launching a furious assault in which he was beaten with a metal rod and his clothes ripped off.

    While he was being beaten, the woman was repeatedly raped, he said, according to a police charge sheet seen by Reuters.

    The prosecution says articles stolen from the couple, including their cellphones, rings and debit cards were found in raids conducted on the homes of the accused. DNA evidence and bloodstained clothes also form part of their case.

    Defense lawyers say they will highlight what they say are discrepancies in the account given by the victim's friend.

    The five men are being tried in a special fast-track court opposite the shopping mall where the victim and her friend went to watch the film "Life of Pi" before boarding the bus.

    About 30 policemen were deployed outside the courtroom on Tuesday as the five accused arrived wearing scarves or handkerchiefs to mask their faces. 

    Related:

    Indian cabinet moves to toughen laws on rape, crimes against women

    Video: Father of rape victim speaks about her dreams, final days

    Attorney in gang rape case blames victim

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    80 comments

    Hope the guilty get what they have coming. Hang 'em high!

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  • 28
    Jan
    2013
    10:25am, EST

    'A dangerous precedent': Russia to put dead man on trial

    Misha Japaridze / AP, file

    Russia is going to try lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who died in jail after being accused of fraud. Magnitsky said Russian officials and organized crime member conspired to frame him, and a report by Russia's presidential human rights council found in July 2011 that Magnitsky had been repeatedly beaten and deliberately denied medical treatment while in jail.

    By Max Seddon, The Associated Press

    MOSCOW -- Russia is preparing to put lawyer Sergei Magnitsky on trial, even though he died in 2009, in the latest twist in a case that has become a byword for Russian corruption and has severely strained U.S.-Russian relations.

    The posthumous trial has already provoked outrage among rights groups who see the whistle-blower's case as indicative of the rampant judicial abuse, skyrocketing graft and blurred boundaries between the state and organized crime that have plagued Russia under President Vladimir Putin.

    "The trial of a deceased person and the forcible involvement of his relatives is a dangerous precedent that would open a whole new chapter in Russia's worsening human rights record," Amnesty International said in a statement last week.

    Prosecutors accuse Magnitsky and his former client, London-based investor William Browder, of a $230 million tax fraud carried out through subsidiaries of Browder's company, Hermitage Capital Management.

    Magnitsky claimed in 2008 that the fraud was committed by an organized crime group who colluded with the corrupt Interior Ministry to register themselves as the owners of three Hermitage subsidiaries and then claim a $230 million tax rebate. He was arrested shortly after by the same officials and accused of stealing the money himself.

    Abused in prison
    A year later, the 37-year-old Magnitsky died in jail of pancreatitis, after what supporters claim was a systematic torture campaign. A report by Russia's presidential human rights council found in July 2011 that Magnitsky had been repeatedly beaten and deliberately denied medical treatment.

    "If they have the same investigators and judges try the case, then what are they going to say — 'we're guilty and we should be punished?' It's obvious what's going to happen," Magnitsky's mother, Nataliya Magnitskaya, told The Associated Press last week.

    Russia's top court ruled shortly after Magnitsky's death that posthumous trials were allowed, with the intention of allowing relatives to clear their loved ones' names. Though neither Magnitsky's relatives nor Browder say they asked for charges to be refiled, prosecutors reopened his case just days after the ruling.

    A Moscow court on Monday set preliminary hearings in the case for Feb. 18. Browder is being tried in absentia; he has not been to Russia since he was banned from entering the country in 2005.

    Evidence collected by Browder on a website, Russian Untouchables, indicates that the officials accused by Magnitsky became substantially wealthier after the tax rebate, spending vastly in excess of their meager official salaries on international travel, luxury cars, and prime real estate in Dubai.

    Officials in Switzerland, Cyprus, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia are attempting to trace portions of the $230 million rebate to banks in those countries.

    Last December, tensions between the U.S. and Russia flared when Congress passed a law named after Magnitsky sanctioning officials Browder accuses of involvement in the fraud.

    Putin at that time said that Magnitsky died of a heart attack and accused Browder of politicizing his death to distract from his own crimes.

    Russia responded to the U.S. law by banning adoptions of Russian children by Americans and dropping charges against a prison doctor on trial for negligence in Magnitsky's death.

    Related:

    PhotoBlog: Anti-corruption blogger challenges Putin

    Thousands march in Moscow to protest adoption ban

    Member of Russian punk rock band Pussy Riot: I've received death threats

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    46 comments

    "We find the defendent GUILTY, and sentence him to life in-what? He's what? Oh. OH. Well, now you're just wasting my time, aren't you?"

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