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...store to identify Svensson. The lead investigator on the case, Leif Jennekvist, said Svensson is "not unlike the man in the NK pictures." DNA tests were conducted on a cap recovered near the scene, but police would not release the results, though on Friday they asked a court to detain Svensson an additional week. Svensson's lawyer, Gunnar Falk, said his client "rejects any involvement in the case." In addition to past episodes of football hooliganism, Svensson was said to have neo-Nazi sympathies. "The man mixes with right extremist circles and is also a friend of some of Sweden...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Swedes Say Goodbye | 9/21/2003 | See Source »

HUPD operates a full-service police department that functions in exactly the same manner as a municipal police force. Harvard police officers carry firearms and are empowered to stop, question, detain and even formally arrest any individual in Massachussetts. HUPD officers possess deputy sheriff powers in Middlesex and Suffolk counties and are sworn special state police officers. But unlike other police forces, Harvard claims its police department is exempt from public records laws that permit the public to see reports created by individual police officers...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, | Title: Veritas on the Beat | 9/17/2003 | See Source »

...operation in Thailand," the intelligence official says. "We think they still have the ability to cause damage." The intelligence agency knows the identity of the mastermind and has him under surveillance. But no arrest has been made because authorities are still gathering evidence. Officials are worried that if they detain the man without convincing proof, Muslims in southern Thailand could riot. The Thais arrested in May, including a doctor, were prominent members of the Muslim community; many in the south claim they are innocent. But officials know they must move fast; the plotters may have set October as a target...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bomb Scare | 7/7/2003 | See Source »

Ganczarski left Germany last November and surfaced in late April in Saudi Arabia, where authorities decided to expel him. But U.S. officials, French sources say, persuaded the Saudis to send him home via Paris--where police could detain him. "The Germans couldn't or wouldn't charge Ganczarski," says a French antiterrorist official. "The Americans wanted him out of commission and his terrorist links fully explored." German officials knew that the suicide bomber responsible for the April 11, 2002, explosion at a synagogue in Djerba, Tunisia--which killed 21 people--called Ganczarski shortly before launching his attack. They also knew...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: One Reason To Still Love The French | 6/23/2003 | See Source »

...lawyer denies that, saying the FBI claim rests upon a witness it refuses to identify. On April 8, Federal Judge Lewis T. Babcock ordered Kamran's and Nasser's release, ruling that the government had failed to show that they were dangerous. At that point, prosecutors successfully moved to detain Nasser again by hitting him with another immigration charge...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Civil Liberties: The War Comes Back Home | 5/12/2003 | See Source »

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