Body Searches
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- All
- News
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US Officials Find Black Box From Ship That Crashed Into Baltimore Bridge
- Wednesday March 27, 2024
- World News | Reuters
US federal safety investigators recovered the black box from the freight ship that crashed into a Baltimore bridge, the agency chief said on Wednesday as rescuers searched for the remains of six construction workers lost in the bridge collapse.
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www.ndtv.com
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Woman with Cocaine Breast Implants Arrested in Madrid
- Friday August 15, 2014
- World News | Agence France-Presse
A Venezuelan woman with 1.7 kilos of cocaine hidden in her breast implants was arrested at Madrid airport after arriving on a flight from Colombia, police said on Friday.
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www.ndtv.com
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Body searches at US airports prompt complaints
- Friday November 19, 2010
- World News | Susan Stellin, The New York Times
In the three weeks since the Transportation Security Administration began more aggressive pat-downs of passengers at airport security checkpoints, traveler complaints have poured in. Some offer graphic accounts of genital contact, others tell of agents gawking or making inappropriate comments, and many express a general sense of powerlessness and h...
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www.ndtv.com
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US Officials Find Black Box From Ship That Crashed Into Baltimore Bridge
- Wednesday March 27, 2024
- World News | Reuters
US federal safety investigators recovered the black box from the freight ship that crashed into a Baltimore bridge, the agency chief said on Wednesday as rescuers searched for the remains of six construction workers lost in the bridge collapse.
-
www.ndtv.com
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Woman with Cocaine Breast Implants Arrested in Madrid
- Friday August 15, 2014
- World News | Agence France-Presse
A Venezuelan woman with 1.7 kilos of cocaine hidden in her breast implants was arrested at Madrid airport after arriving on a flight from Colombia, police said on Friday.
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www.ndtv.com
-
Body searches at US airports prompt complaints
- Friday November 19, 2010
- World News | Susan Stellin, The New York Times
In the three weeks since the Transportation Security Administration began more aggressive pat-downs of passengers at airport security checkpoints, traveler complaints have poured in. Some offer graphic accounts of genital contact, others tell of agents gawking or making inappropriate comments, and many express a general sense of powerlessness and h...
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www.ndtv.com