
Indian tourist in US caught stealing items worth nearly $1,000 from Target
'But if I'm paying for it, what is the harm?' she said. 'It would have been fine if you didn't leave, right? You would have had that opportunity to pay. But because you left the store at that point, you chose to not pay for it, and we can't go back," said the official in the video. A police bodycam video of the incident has now gone viral.
Watch video here:
The moment of her arrest was captured and shared by the independent YouTube channel @BodyCamEdition, which uploads raw police footage. The viral has garnered is about to reach 1 million views in just two days.
What will the impact of this incident?
Legal experts say that such an incident can carry serious consequences, especially for foreign nationals. 'Regardless, this is a Crime Involving Moral Turpitude, namely one that involves dishonesty and could have serious consequences,' Alen Takhsh, a US-based immigration attorney, told TOI. 'If you are in the US on a student visa, an arrest for shoplifting, let alone a conviction, could result in your visa being revoked. If you are in the US on a visitor or work visa, it could lead to you not being allowed to re-enter the US in the future.'
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Business Standard
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- Business Standard
India should negotiate trade deal with US on its own terms: EAC-PM chief
India should negotiate a trade agreement with the US on its own terms, keeping in view the national interest, Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister (EAC-PM) Chairman S Mahendra Dev has said. Dev expressed hope that India will have an advantage over other countries on tariffs once the Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) are signed, and it would boost exports. "The overall approach of India is negotiating trade agreements with countries on its own terms and keeping in view the national interests. The negotiations are going on and the ultimate decision depends on the mutual interests of both countries," he told PTI. US President Donald Trump has said the proposed trade deal with India would be on the lines of what America has finalised with Indonesia on Tuesday. Under the US-Indonesia trade pact, the Southeast Asian nation will provide complete access to its market to US products, while Indonesian goods would attract a 19 per cent duty in America. In addition, Indonesia has committed to purchasing $15 billion in US energy, $4.5 billion in American Agricultural Products, and 50 Boeing jets. The Indian team is in Washington for the fifth round of negotiations for the proposed Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA). India has hardened its position on the US demand for duty concessions on agri and dairy products. New Delhi has, so far, not given any duty concessions to any of its trading partners in a free trade agreement in the dairy sector. India is seeking the removal of this additional tariff (26 per cent). It is also seeking the easing of tariffs on steel and aluminium (50 per cent) and the auto (25 per cent) sectors. Against these, India has reserved its right under the WTO (World Trade Organisation) norms to impose retaliatory duties. Asked should India has a slightly higher inflation target rate for a growth economy, Dev said, "There is no need to increase inflation target when the present framework is doing well on both inflation and growth objectives." He noted that there are some suggestions that RBI should use core inflation, excluding food for inflation targeting (IT). "We will have better inflation data from CPI after the revision of base year to 2024," the EAC-PM Chairman said. Dev said the experience of (IT) in the last 10 years shows that Inflation stayed within the band of 2 per cent-6 per cent with some exceptions and inflation declined significantly under IT framework. "It may be noted that higher inflation hurts the poor and middle class mostly. Low inflation is also important for sustainable growth," he said. Since 2016, India has adopted a flexible inflation targeting (IT) framework where the RBI aims to maintain a specific inflation rate, currently 4 per cent, with a tolerance band of +/- 2 per cent (i.e., between 2 per cent and 6 per cent). Similarly, Dev said the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) targets should be continued for sound fiscal management. "It may be noted that a higher fiscal deficit will increase inflation and hurt growth," he said, adding that Interest payments will be higher and lower funds will be left for development expenditure. While noting that the government has done well to reduce fiscal deficit from 9.2 per cent in FY21 to 4.8 per cent in FY25 and budgeted 4.4 per cent in FY26, he said the government has been sticking to its fiscal consolidation roadmap despite competing demands for expenditures. On Production Linked Incentive (PLI), he said one should not look at only the direct effect of PLI-linked sectors, as there is significant interlinkage between PLI and non-PLI sectors. "PLI incentives, along with FTAs with other countries, should attract FDI and enhance exports," Dev said. He pointed out that studies indicate that the share of Direct Value Addition (DVA) declined for electronics while the share of indirect DVA increased, suggesting linkages with upstream industries. "Government is working on increasing gross value added, reducing import content and increasing employment for PLI sectors by encouraging local manufacturing capability," Dev said. The government launched the PLI scheme for 14 sectors to incentivise domestic manufacturing, increase production, create new jobs and boost exports. The thrust of PLI is to make domestic manufacturing globally competitive and reduce imports by increasing domestic value addition. The PLI scheme adopts a sector-specific approach, avoiding a "one size fits all" methodology. In the electronics sector, PLI aims to scale up assembly processes to encourage the existing domestic manufacturing ecosystem. India is one of the biggest assemblers and exporters of mobile handsets. In FY15, mobile phone imports accounted for 78 per cent of the market in value terms, whereas by FY23 this figure had dropped to just 4 per cent. "A similar story can be heard for exports. The electronics and renewable energy sectors have attracted higher FDI inflows," Dev said. (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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Business Standard
22 minutes ago
- Business Standard
Mock drills in Delhi on Thursday, Friday to assess emergency preparedness
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Business Standard
22 minutes ago
- Business Standard
QpiAI raises USD 32 million (INR 279 crore) in Series-A round led by Avataar Ventures and National Quantum Mission
VMPL New Delhi [India], July 17: Dr Nagendra Nagaraja CEO and Founder of QpiAI quoted "We thank our investors who enabled us to take QpiAI to next level. We were able to achieve great traction in commercialization of NISQ (Noisy Intermediate State Quantum) computers used for education, research and algorithmic prototyping. Markets are ripe for utility scale Quantum computers with logical qubits and we are leading efforts towards building full stack utility scale Quantum computers" * QpiAI raises $32 million (INR 279 cr) in Series A round led by Avataar Ventures and National Quantum mission of Department of Science and Technology, Government of India. Current investors and additional new investors also participated * QpiAI has developed a full-stack Quantum Computer with proprietary hardware and software, and has delivered real world Quantum applications in material science and drugs discovery to several global enterprises * QpiAI team is led by Dr. Nagendra (ex Nvidia, Qualcomm) and consists of over two dozen PhDs from top-tier Quantum research universities in the US and Europe; company has offices in India, Finland and the US The funds will be used to accelerate delivery of its utility scale Quantum computer and expand globally Mohan Kumar, Managing Partner at Avataar Ventures further added " We believe Quantum has the potential to advance mankind beyond imagination and India has a unique opportunity to lead this frontier tech. QpiAI has demonstrated a strong technical and commercial leadership with its functional Quantum Computing technology and real-world applications at large automotive and life sciences customers. They are on path to lead the Quantum-wave for the emerging markets with its advanced full-stack technology. We have been inspired by the vision, achievements and capabilities of the QpiAI team led by Dr. Nagendra and are excited to partner with them in their growth journey." Dr Ajai Chowdhry, Chairman of Indian National Quantum Mission further added " NQM is formed with a mission to enable Quantum ecosystem in India. We are early supporter of QpiAI and are proud of its achievements so far. We are delighted that NQM's support is helping QpiAI raise funds from global investors and promote the Indian startup ecosystem in Quantum technologies. QpiAI represents one of the successes of NQM. We plan to continue to support home grown product companies like QpiAI to help them grow into large enterprises and position India as a global leader in Quantum technologies. We congratulate Dr Nagendra and his team on this financing round and look forward to them achieving new commercial and technological milestones" About QpiAI QpiAI ( is a Bangalore based deep-tech company pioneering the convergence of Artificial Intelligence and Quantum Computing to solve some of the world's most complex industrial and scientific challenges. QpiAI's vertically integrated stack enables seamless innovation across hardware, software, and applications. The portfolio includes full-stack Quantum Computers (25 Qubit Indus and 8 Qubit QVidya); QpiAI-Explorer, an education platform; QpiAI-Quantum, offering SDKs, compilers, and simulators for quantum development; software products and platforms such as QpiAI-Opt, QpiAI-Pharma, QpiAI-Logistics, QpiAI-Matter, QpiAI- Pro and QpiAI-Agenthive across industries like manufacturing, industrial, transportation, finance, pharma and materials. (ADVERTORIAL DISCLAIMER: The above press release has been provided by VMPL. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of the same)