A seven-year-old race-related assault conviction could dash English songbird Cheryl Cole’s hopes of obtaining a work permit and joining Simon Cowell on the American adaptation of the TV talent show X Factor panel. Cole, who already works as a judge on the UK version of the singing show has been offered a job as a [...]
Posts Tagged ‘conviction’
Assault Conviction May Keep English Songbird Cheryl Cole Off “X Factor Americaâ€
STI down 0.2% as at 9:21 a.m.; Market lacks conviction: Kim Eng
Singapore shares slips on negative Wall Street cue.
“Expect range-bound trading today,” says Kim Eng Securities; “the STI has been slow in pushing to the upside and has failed to close above the 3200 level, indicating a lack of conviction.”
Benchmark off 0.2% at 3,183.98, likely to hold above current 3,150 November trough. Attention mainly on small caps, with most active being Gallant Venture (5IG.SG), +9.8% at $0.28, after Kim Eng Securities’ initiation at Buy with $0.75 target.
Other actively-traded stocks include EcoWise (5CT.SG), +4.0% at $0.13, Top Global (519.SG), +33.3% at $0.02, Bio-Treat (B22.SG), down 28.6% at $0.05. Among blue chips, Singapore Airlines (C6L.SG) down 1.5% at $15.72 as stock trades ex-dividend.
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STI flat at 9:20 a.m., Lacks conviction: Kim Eng; Small caps up
Singapore shares flat despite Wall Street’s pullback; market lacks leads from regional markets with Japan, Korea, China, Hong Kong shut for public holidays, says Dow Jones.
Gainers outnumbering decliners by 2 to 1, with lower liners again outperforming blue chips. STI flat at 3,097.06 vs +0.2% at 3,102.76 earlier, with support at August 3,043 high, resistance at year-to-date 3,116 peak.
“The STI has been slow in pushing to the upside and failed to close above the 3,100 level, indicating a lack of conviction,” says Kim Eng Securities; “expect range-bound trading today.”
FTSE ST Small Cap Index +0.5%, FTSE ST Mid Cap Index +0.4%. Among lower liners, most sought-after plays include VDH Energy (595.SG), +6.3% at $0.17, GMG Global (5IM.SG), +3.7% at $0.28, UMS Holdings (558.SG), +5.4% at $0.49.
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Straits Asia Resources’ target cut to $1.70 by Goldman Sachs; keeps ‘conviction sell’
Goldman Sachs has cut Straits Asia Resources’ (AJ1.SG) target price to $1.70 from $1.85 on lower earnings estimates but maintains “sell” rating with stock on conviction sell list, reported Dow Jones Newswires.
The brokerage is cutting FY11, FY12 earnings estimates by 10%, 4% respectively, on lower production assumptions for thermal coal miner’s Sebuku mine and higher costs due to expensive temporary measures for loading coal in Jembayan mine.
STI gains 0.5%, but risky to go long now, says dealer
Singapore stocks are not expected to head much higher as buying conviction generally weak given lack of firm leads, reported Dow Jones Newswires.
The STI is up 0.5% at 2,855.02 vs morning high of 2,861.55. Gainers continue to outnumber decliners by about two to one in broader market, but overall volume thin at just over 1 billion shares.
Brown to read at Harlem school despite conviction for beating up Rihanna
R ‘n’ B singer Chris Brown is said to have been invited to read at Harlem’s Sisulu-Walker Charter School’s annual Family Read Night, despite being convicted for beating up ex-girlfriend Rihanna.
The event, which is held to encourage students to read, will see Brown, 20, reading to kids.
“I extended an invitation to all celebrities and politicians, [...]
US student begins prison sentence following murder conviction
Amanda Knox has sought comfort from visiting family members on her first day in prison since being convicted of murdering her British roommate. The family of victim Meredith Kercher said Saturday that the verdict brought a measure of justice. However, they said, it was not a time to
Mel Gibson’’s drunken driving conviction taken off record
Mel Gibson’’s drunken driving conviction from a 2006 arrest has been taken off the record.
A California judge erased the actor’s criminal record after the star successfully completed probation and maintained a clean driving record, reports China Daily.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Lawrence Mira: “He does not appear to be on any sort of probation or [...]
Clinton denounces Aung San Suu Kyi conviction
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday denounced the conviction of Burmese pro-democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi.
Secretary of State Clinton again called for Aung San Suu Kyi’s release from house arrest following her conviction.
SC upholds R K Anand’’s conviction, clears I U Khan in BMW case
The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld the conviction of criminal lawyer R K Anand for contempt of court for attempting to influence key witness Sunil Kulkarni in the 1999 BMW hit-and-run case.
The apex court, however, set aside the conviction of Special Public Prosecutor I U Khan, who had also been debarred by the Delhi High [...]
NoW paid investigator after jail term
Glenn Mulcaire received a payment from newspaper after phone-hacking conviction, editor admits
News of the World executives admitted today that the private investigator Glenn Mulcaire was given a payment by the company after his conviction for phone hacking, as MPs cast doubt on elements of their testimony.
During a parliamentary hearing lasting almost three and a half hours, MPs heard evidence from four senior company figures including former News of the World editor Andy Coulson, now David Cameron’s director of communications.
It also emerged that:
• Scotland Yard never asked Coulson and former News of the World managing editor Stuart Kuttner to help with their investigation into former royal correspondent Clive Goodman, who was also jailed for phone hacking.
• News International confirmed the Guardian’s revelation that it had paid to settle a claim over phone hacking from Gordon Taylor, the chief executive of the Professional Footballers’ Association.
• News International’s executive chairman, James Murdoch, was aware of the decision to pay £700,000 to settle Taylor’s case.
• Coulson was recently told by police that his phone may also have been hacked.
• One MP questioned Coulson’s credentials for becoming an adviser to a future Tory government because phones belonging to staff in the royal household were hacked during his editorship of the News of the World.
• The judge who presided over Goodman and Mulcaire’s trial said the private investigator had “dealt with others at News International”.
The Plaid Cymru MP Adam Price cast doubt on the account given by News International executives of an email sent by a junior reporter to Mulcaire, containing a transcript of a series of hacked phone messages, that referred to the News of the World’s chief reporter, Neville Thurlbeck.
Crone told MPs that the reporter could not remember the email, while Myler said Thurlbeck had no recollection of receiving it and there was no IT evidence to suggest that he did.
Price said the email was a “smoking gun”. “The sender of the email does not remember sending it, the recipient does not remember receiving it: it’s completely implausible,” he added.
News International executives twice attempted to get MPs thrown out of today’s hearing of the Commons culture, media and sport select committee.
They claimed Labour MP Tom Watson should not be there because he was involved in legal action against the Sun, while Kuttner accused Philip Davies MP of prejudging him after raising questions about the timing of his recent resignation. The Committee’s chairman, John Whittingdale MP, rejected the complaints.
During the hearing, it emerged that Mulcaire was paid following his conviction in January 2007 for hacking into voicemail messages.
MPs were also told that an “arrangement” was made with Goodman after his conviction and that News International would make more internal inquiries about the details.
Tom Crone, the legal manager for News Group, the News International subsidiary that publishes the News of the World, said Mulcaire had earned rights as a contracted employee with a annual deal with the worth more than £100,000.
“Mr Mulcaire raised legal issues over his status … if someone has worked for you for x hours a week he has certain employment rights. Given these employment rights, there’s a process that has to be followed when that relationship comes to an end. I believe as a result of failures in the process, there was a sum of money paid to him,” Crone added.
He said this “bore no relation” to a figure of £200,000 suggested by Davies.
Davies also asked whether Mulcaire had been paid to keep quiet. Crone replied: “Absolutely not.”
Later, Paul Farrelly MP brought up the matter again, questioning why Mulcaire had been paid.
“Mr Mulcaire was convicted on six counts, a convicted criminal, who breached the press code of conduct all over the place, yet at the end of it he still has claims against the company in terms of employment rights?” Farrelly said.
Crone responded that Mulcaire apparently did have such rights. “If you don’t get the process right, you have to pay them,” he said.
Colin Myler, the News of the World editor brought in when Coulson resigned over the phone-hacking affair, who also gave evidence to the committee today, added: “In all seriousness, HR laws on employment are incredibly complicated. I think it allows people to do rather extraordinary things and still come back on an employers and say you still have not got a right to fire me.”
Asked whether there had been any payment to Goodman, Crone and Myler both said they were not aware of such an award.
Kuttner, who has stepped down as NoW managing editor this month, was also asked if Goodman had been paid since his conviction. “As far as I know, arrangements or agreements were made with them [Goodman and Mulcaire],” he added. “I have no details at all of the substance of those agreements.”
Asked by Davies who then would know, he said he would make inquiries, adding: “It’s quite a large company.”
Myler reeled off a list of the activities Mulcaire, a former AFC Wimbledon footballer, undertook for the News of the World, which included checking Land Registry records, directorships and court records.
“He gave advice on crime issues, had vast professional football knowledge, he was involved in all aspects of the game,” Myler said. “He came up with story ideas, tips, some that worked out, some that did not. He had a vast database of contact numbers in the sports industry and the showbiz world.”
MPs also heard that the police investigation that led to Goodman and Mulcaire’s convictions did not call on Coulson or Kuttner.
“I was never interviewed, never asked to give any form of evidence,” Coulson told the hearing.
Farrelly asked Coulson whether he found that strange. “It’s a question for the police,” Coulson replied. “I think I’m right in saying the police have made clear, the Guardian have made clear, the PCC have made clear, that there’s no evidence of my direct involvement in any of this.”
Kuttner also said he had not been asked to help the police.
Farrelly asked Coulson how he would be able to have a relationship with Palace spokesmen if he became an adviser in a Cameron government.
Coulson said he had met Palace spokesman Paddy Harverson socially and apologised to the royal family. “There’s no problem my end,” he added.
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India court upholds conviction

A court in India’s capital, Delhi, has upheld the conviction of Sanjeev Nanda, the son of a wealthy arms dealer, in a notorious hit-and-run case.
The court, however, reduced Nanda’s sentence from five to three years.
Nanda, who was accused of driving while drunk, was found guilty last year of running over and killing six people in Delhi in January 1999.
His lawyers now say they will appeal against his conviction and sentence in the country’s Supreme Court.
Three others were also convicted for destruction of evidence by the Delhi high court when it sentenced Nanda to jail last September. His co-accused was acquitted.
The court also ordered the police to launch criminal proceedings against a key witness in the case for "giving misleading and false testimony" in the case.
During the trial, several witnesses changed their testimony, amid accusations they had been bought off.
The so-called "BMW hit-and-run case" has been compared with other high-profile cases in Delhi in the past decade in which witnesses changed their testimony, amid accusations that they had been bought off.
In one such case – the 1999 murder of model Jessica Lal – the lack of evidence led to the main accused being acquitted until a public outcry led to a retrial and the verdict being overturned.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Delhi HC upholds conviction of Nanda in BMW hit and run case
The Delhi High Court has upheld the conviction of Sanjeev Nanda in the infamous BMW hit and run case, in which six persons were killed in 1999.
Justice Kailash Gambhir however reduced Nanda’s jail term from five to two years.
Nanda, a grandson of former Navy Chief Admiral S.M. Nanda, killed six persons while driving a BMW [...]



