
Drugs worth around Rs 350 cr seized in Mizoram, 1 arrested
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
10 hours ago
- Time of India
Mumbai shocker: Man arrested for filming woman at Andheri station; making obscene remarks, IT Act case registered
MUMBAI: A 54-year-old man was arrested by the Government Railway Police (GRP) for filming an objectionable video of a woman commuter at Andheri railway station and making obscene remarks, police said. The accused, identified as Nasir Chaudhary, is a vegetable vendor. The incident occurred on Tuesday evening. You Can Also Check: Mumbai AQI | Weather in Mumbai | Bank Holidays in Mumbai | Public Holidays in Mumbai | Gold Rates Today in Mumbai | Silver Rates Today in Mumbai The 30-year-old complainant was waiting at Andheri station to board a local train around 6.30 pm when the accused began recording her. He stopped filming when a Churchgate-bound train arrived. A co-traveller noticed him filming and confronted him, but the accused shooed him away. After boarding the train, the co-traveller alerted the woman, who demanded that the accused delete the video. An altercation ensued, during which the accused made obscene remarks. When the train halted at Bandra, the woman, with the help of fellow passengers, took the accused to the Bandra GRP chowky. Police examined the accused's phone and recovered the objectionable video. A case was registered under the provisions of the Bhartiya Nyaya Sanhita and the Information Technology Act. The case was transferred to the Andheri GRP, as the incident fell within their jurisdiction. The Andheri GRP produced the accused before a magistrate, who remanded him to one day in police custody. The accused's phone has been seized and will be sent to a forensic science laboratory to check if he filmed any other women. Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area.


Mint
a day ago
- Mint
Do Kwon Pleads Guilty to Fraud Over $40 Billion Terra Collapse
(Bloomberg) -- Terraform Labs Pte. co-founder Do Kwon pleaded guilty to charges in a US fraud prosecution tied to the $40 billion collapse of the TerraUSD stablecoin in 2022. Kwon pleaded guilty to conspiracy and wire fraud under an agreement with prosecutors at a hearing in New York on Tuesday. The 33-year-old, dressed in a yellow prison jumpsuit, also agreed to forfeit $19.3 million and some properties as part of the plea deal. 'I knowingly agreed with others to defraud, and did in fact defraud, purchasers of cryptocurrencies issued by my company, Terraform Labs,' Kwon said, reading from a statement. 'What I did was wrong and I want to apologize for my conduct. I take full responsibility.' Kwon was charged in both South Korea and the US in connection with the implosion of Singapore-based Terraform's TerraUSD, which shook the crypto world in the spring of 2022 and helped trigger the meltdown of cryptocurrency exchange FTX. The guilty plea averts a trial set for next year before US District Judge Paul Engelmayer. He was charged in 2023 and was extradited to the US in January, after spending almost two years in Montenegro, where he'd been arrested and convicted of using a phony passport while a fugitive from charges in his native South Korea. US prosecutors said the longest sentence they will seek under the plea deal is 12 years. The maximum US sentences are five years for the conspiracy count and 20 years for the wire fraud charge. Sentencing is scheduled for Dec. 11. He had faced nine charges under the indictment. After he serves half of his sentence, the US will support Kwon spending the remainder of his prison term in South Korea, if he abides by the terms of his plea deal and qualifies under transfer program. Kwon had been a fugitive from the South Korean charges for months when he and Terraform's former chief financial officer were caught with fake passports in March 2023 trying to board a Dubai-bound private jet at the airport in Montenegro's capital, Podgorica. Terraform and Kwon, who owned 92% of the company, were found liable for civil fraud in a 2024 suit by the US Securities and Exchange Commission. A jury in New York, at the end of a two-week trial, determined that Kwon and Terraform misled investors — a dismal sign for the former crypto mogul's chances of beating criminal charges. The jury found that Terraform and Kwon falsely claimed that Chai, a popular Korean payment application, was using Terraform's blockchain technology to make transactions. The jurors also found investors were misled about the stability of the stablecoin, which Kwon and Terraform claimed was algorithmically pegged to the US dollar. Terraform and Kwon later agreed to pay $4.47 billion and to wind down the firm, in a deal to resolve the case. The case is US v. Kwon, 23-cr-0151, US District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan). (Adds plea starting in first paragraph, sentence possibility in sixth.) More stories like this are available on


Mint
a day ago
- Mint
Air India plane crash: Man who lost mother moves US Federal Court against Boeing
The kin of Kalpana Prajapati, one of the victims of the tragic Ahmedabad plane crash, have moved the US Federal Court against Boeing for speedy justice. Talking to news agency ANI, Hir Prajapati, Kalpana's son, said that the family has hired Mike Andrews, a US lawyer who is currently representing over 65 families affected by the tragic crash. He recently slammed Air India for compensation delays for the victims' families, claiming that it would not have happened if Ratan Tata, former Chairperson of the Tata Group, had been alive. 'We expect the raw details of information from the black-box to come before us at the earliest so that we can make further decisions regarding next course of steps, along with our lawyer,' he said. 'In India, trials get dragged for years. We are fighting the case in the US so that a decision is pronounced early. We believe we will get justice,' he added. Mir told ANI that the Indian government and police helped the Prajapati family 'a lot' at the time of the incident. 'We are thankful to the doctors, too, who handed over the bodies to us after a swift DNA test.' Sharing the tragic detail of the accident, Mir said his mother, Kalpana Prajapati, had rescheduled the flight twice only to end up on the fateful crash. 'I had initially booked a 9th June flight for her but she had fast and she told me that she cannot travel that day. So, I then rescheduled it to 11th June. But she told me that she doesn't want to travel on an odd date. So, I finally booked a ticket for 12th June,' he said. Former Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani was among the 241 people who died in the June 12 crash of Air India flight AI 171 in Ahmedabad. The London-bound Boeing 787, carrying 242 people--including 230 passengers, 10 crew members, and two pilots--crashed shortly after takeoff.