Society's Child
Sachsen police have confirmed they are working with Bundespolizei Pirna and Deutsche Bahn to investigate the incident and have detained one passenger on the train.
A police spokesman told Leipziger Volkszeitung that a passenger "freaked out" on board the Intercity Express 2302. The man was then contained by train attendants in a carriage.
The train was stopped at Leipzig Messe station after the man began behaving aggressively and police are trying to establish whether he posed a real threat to other passengers.
Local reporters claimed a man threatened to blow up the train, which was en route from Munich to Berlin.
Javon Shipman was injured when a New York Police Department officer opened fire on him on Tuesday. The officer justified shooting by claiming that Shipman drove his vehicle towards him.
However, the NYPD has a patrol guide that specifically prohibits discharging firearms at a moving vehicle "unless deadly force is being used against the member of the service or anything person present, by means other than a moving vehicle."
Four officers were serving warrants on Tuesday morning when they recognized Javon Shipman, who was wanted for attacking his girlfriend. Two officers blocked Shipman's car with an unmarked police vehicle in the front while two other officers approached on foot.
Capt. Mike Campagna held a press conference where he explained that an employee working in the mailroom came across the suspicious package and alerted her supervisors. A canine bomb dog alerted its authorities that the package needed further investigation. It has since been removed from the police department and taken to a secure location where it can be assessed. Everyone was reported to be safe following the evacuation.
Campagna told reporters that this was the first time he knew of that the department has been evacuated due to a threat.
According to the Manzhouli Entry-Exit Inspection and Quarantine Bureau it is 267 percent increase from last year.
A staff member with the bureau, Xie Jinyong said the import of top quality Russian ice cream has also risen this year.
"A cup of Russian ice cream usually sells at 15 yuan ($2.24), 25 yuan or 30 yuan, and the top quality one sells for up to 50 yuan ($7.49)," Xie said.
An affordable price, partly due to the fall of the Russian ruble, along with the quality and taste has improved the marketability of Russian ice cream in the Chinese market, according to newspaper.
Ice cream from Russia is generally less expensive than many premium brands available in China. A 100 grams package of Russian ice cream is typically priced at 10 yuan, while a small cup of Haagen-Dazs ice cream weighing about 80 grams costs 33 yuan.
While total crime fell to its lowest rate since 1974, sex crime, violent crime and vandalism were found to be on the rise.
Despite an overall 4 percent drop in recorded crime, the figures indicate sex crimes increased by 7 percent in the last year, the Scottish government's annual report on recorded crime reveals.
A Russian in southern Siberia has denied any knowledge of a hack that was carried out against US Democratic National Committee using the servers he leased, a police source told RIA Novosti on Wednesday.
"Vladimir Fomenko, a 26-year-old resident of Biysk in the Altai region, founded a web hosting service, King Servers, that leases server space, mostly to anonymous clients," the source in the law enforcement said. "He rented out servers that were used in the hack, there was no criminal intent. His business is absolutely legal and he blocked the servers immediately."
"During the month of September, seven Afghan students were considered absent without leave (AWOL) during international military student programs," Pentagon spokesman Cmdr. Patrick L. Evans has said, according to the Washington Free Beacon. Later, Evans also confirmed his statement to Fox News.
Three soldiers from Afghanistan have been missing from their bases in different parts of the US since September 17-18, when two states - New Jersey and New York - were struck by two bombings. Both were linked to Ahmad Rahami, a radicalized Afghan-born US citizen.
Two of the missing Afghans had been undergoing training at Fort Leonard Wood in Missouri, and one was at Fort Gordon in Georgia. To be considered AWOL, a student needs to be absent from scheduled training for more than 24 hours.
According to the Beacon, in those cases, their fleeing was coordinated, and the three are being probed for possible connections to Rahami.
However, as an unnamed Army source told the newspaper, officials see no connection between the students disappearing and the timing of the two bombings.
The "initial assessment is that there is no relation and the timing is coincidental," the source said, while Evans refused to comment on whether the Pentagon has any security concerns.
Besides the three students, there are another four Afghan trainees who also disappeared earlier in September.
The Iraqi National Project has stated that the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act, which would allow 9/11 victims and families to sue Saudi Arabia over the nation's role in the attacks, has opened a pathway for lawsuits against foreign governments.
The White House claims that the bill was vetoed because it would open the floodgates for other nations and organizations to sue the US, which is exactly what the Iraqi group wants to do.
El Cajon police then confiscated phones from witnesses who may have recorded the shooting.
The 30-year-old man, who was unarmed, was apparently having a seizure, which was when his sister called police for help, according to witnesses.
"I called you to help me but you killed my brother," the woman says in a video that can be seen here as well as below.
"Why couldn't you guys tase him? Why why why why?"















Comment: What a sweet surprise for the Russian ice cream industry!