In United States v. Santos, by a 5-4 decision, the
United States Supreme Court takes a narrow interpretation of federal laws regarding
money laundering, and uses the decision in Cuellar v. United States to unanimously overturn the money laundering conviction of Humberto Cuellar.
(Fox News)
The Supreme Court refuses to hear Major League Baseball Advanced Media v. C.B.C.Major League Baseball had sought to overturn a judgement against them in state court in
Missouri that permitted C.B.C. to run
fantasy baseball leagues using real player names without a license from MLB.
(Sports Illustrated)
Burma detains activist and comedian
Zarganar who has been involved in private relief efforts for the victims of
Cyclone Nargis and seize his computer and banned films including Rambo.
(Reuters)
A day of mourning is declared in
Russia's
Kaliningrad Region as the death toll from Thursday's explosion and fire on the MV Yenisei reaches eight, with two missing.
(Xinhua)(Wikinews)
Two
Kenyan ministers – Roads Minister
Kipkalya Kones and Assistant Home Affairs Minister
Lorna Laboso – die in a plane crash near
Narok in western Kenya while traveling to campaign in by-elections.
(BBC News)
A series of strong
thunderstorms track through Southern
Quebec, causing heavy damage south of
Montreal and leaving over 250,000 people out of electricity.
Champlain Bridge is closed for several hours after a wind gust causes seven
semi-trailers to tip on their side.
(CBC)(SRC)
Reports claim that at least 10
Pakistan Army soldiers have died in an apparent
United States-led
air strike near the border with
Afghanistan with eight
Taliban militants also killed.
Pakistancondemns the airstrike as "unprovoked and cowardly". The U.S. has released video of the strike showing the militants fighting in order to justify the attacks.
(BBC News)(Reuters)
Bill C-61, An Act to amend the Copyright Act, is tabled in the second session of the 39th Canadian Parliament by Minister of Industry
Jim Prentice, in efforts to better comply to the WIPO treaty.
(CBC News)
The French Defense Ministry announces
France is increasing its military presence in
Djibouti following
border clashes with
Eritrea. France has a mutual defense agreement with Djibouti.
(Xinhua)
More than 15 Taliban insurgents are killed as
NATO and Afghan forces attempt to recapture the hundreds of prisoners who escaped following the
Kandahar prison raid.
(Reuters)
Lebanese security officials say that clashes between pro-government and anti-government lead to three deaths in the villages of Taalabaya and Saadnayel in eastern Lebanon.
(AP via Google News)[permanent dead link]
An
Alabama state judge upholds a fraud verdict against
AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals in a
Medicaid drug pricing suit but reduces the value of damages to
$160 million.
(AP via Forbes)
A female
Iranian student who accused the vice-chancellor of her university of sexually harassing her was arrested. The charges against her aren't clear. The vice-chancellor was also arrested.
BBC News
Police in
Nepal detain more than 700
Tibetan exiles protesting outside the
Chinese embassy and arrest three activists for alleged anti-China activities.
(AFP via Google News)
After white patches uncovered by digging from the
Phoenix lander are found to have
sublimated by the lander's cameras,
NASA believes it has found
water ice on
Mars.
(NASA)
The death toll in the
Philippines from Typhoon Fengshen rises to at least 20 from flooding and
landslides. Ten people drown after the Rifao River overflows its banks and sweeps away three houses in
South Upi, Maguindanao.
(Xinhua)
An
Australian air safety group claims that
Yogyakarta International Airport was operating illegally with no valid license at the time
Garuda Indonesia Flight 200 crashed, killing 21. They also accuse two other airports of similar violations and three official bodies of keeping it from public knowledge.
(Crikey)
A
bomb at an office building in
Baghdad kills eight people and injures 10. The U.S. military blames the attack on rogue members of Shia Muslim militias. The attack is believed to be a suicide bombing, but the U.S. military is investigating allegations that a bomb was planted in the building.
(BBC News)
The authorities in
Mexico City sack 17 police officers for their role in a stampede during a raid at a nightclub that caused the death of 12 people.
(BBC News)
Ireland'sEconomic and Social Research Institute (ESRI) says the country is in the grip of a recession for the first time in a quarter of a century. However, it predicts the economy will return to positive growth in 2009 and normal growth by 2010.
(RTÉ News)
EU's representative in
KosovoPieter Feith says he expects
Montenegro will recognize Kosovo's unilateral independence "as soon as possible", as it would "contribute to regional stability".
(B92)
Vinicio Gómez,
Guatemala's Interior Minister, dies in a helicopter crash in the central department of
Baja Verapaz; deputy minister Édgar Hernández and two pilots are also killed.
(BBC News)
The discovery that the sunken
Philippines ferry
MV Princess of the Stars was carrying 10,000 kilos of the dangerous pesticide
endosulfan leads to the temporary cessation of the recovery of the bodies on board.
(CBC)
An investigation into the crash of a
Black Hawk helicopter on
HMAS Kanimbla that killed two concludes excessive loading on the engine caused it to lose power.
(The Australian)
The Bureau of Marine Investigation says it has uncovered multiple lapses in Sulpicio's training and orientation of the ship's crew, but cautioned that it cannot yet draw any conclusions about the disaster's cause.
(Inquirer.net)