NPR美国国家公共电台 NPR 2013-08-20(在线收听

 The U.S. says it has nothing to do with Britain's decision to detain a partner of American journalist Glenn Greenwald who broke the NSA surveillance story with materials leaked by Edward Snowden.  Britain's independent monitor of terrorism legislation, David Anderson, says David Miranda's nine-hour long detention at Heathrow Airport yesterday raises a number of questions.  

"I'm very interested in what happened yesterday. I've asked the police and the home office to be fully briefed on it. We have something like 200 million passing through our ports and airports every year in the UK, sixty-thousand of those were examined under Schedule Seven last year and of those, fewer than 40 were even held for as long as six hours. So to be held for nine hours, which was the maximum the law allows, is very unusual indeed." 
David Anderson in an interview with the BBC. 
Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales is due to be sentenced this week for the death of 16 Afghan civilians. NPR's Martin Kaste reports.  
Bales will not get the death penalty. His June guilty plea was part of a deal to avoid execution. So now in a court-martial at Joint Base Lewis-McChord near Tacoma, a military jury will decide whether his life sentence should come with the possibility of parole. His defense team is likely to cite extenuating circumstances, such as the stress of being on his fourth deployment and the effects of alcohol. There has been speculation that his behavior may have been affected by Lariam- that's an anti-malarial drug that sometimes causes strain psychological reactions. But / last week, Bales' lawyer said that defense was looking less likely. Martin Kaste, NPR News, Seattle.  
The military judge presiding over the trial of accused Fort Hood shooter is blocking several key pieces of evidence. Prosecutors say but explain Major Nidal Hasan’s state of mind. Hasan who is acting his own attorney has remained largely silent during the first two weeks of his trial. Hasan’s accused of killing 13 people and wounding more than 30 in the 2009 attack days before he was to be deployed to Afghanistan.  
Illinois now requires gun owners to report a loss of stolen gun within 72 hours under a new law. Amanda Vinicky in / WUIS has details from Springfield. Illinois now requires gun owners to report a loss of stolen gun within 72 hours. State police director Hiram Grau says just as someone would immediately call 911 if their car was stolen. They should do the same if a gun goes missing.  
"As police officers, we see horrible violence in our communities almost every day. It's crazy, it's insane and it has to stop." 
The law also expends background checks starting in January provided in the online sellers are required to make sure a buyer can legally own a gun. For NPR News, I'm Amanda Vinicky in Springfield, Illinois.  
Dow is off more than 40 points to 1538. This is NPR.  
While Egypt falls deeper into its worst political unrest since the 2011 revolution, the leader who was ousted in that uprising and subsequently arrested could soon be a free man. Judicial officials say former President Hosni Mubarak may be released from custody this week. They say they no longer have grounds to continue detaining the 85-year-old. Mubarak was detained in April 2011. A month later he was sentenced to life in prison for allowing a crackdown on political descend that led to the death of hundreds of protestors. Mubarak pealed and he's being retried.  
Jury selection began today for the first trial related to Atlanta School cheating scandal. NPR's Kathy Lohr reports nearly three / teachers and administrators were indicted this year for allegedly conspiring to change test scores in the district schools. Prosecutors say teachers and administrators and the former Superintendent conspired to change scores on statewide test, so students appeared to be doing better. Teachers are accused of holding parties where they erased incorrect answers and replace them with correct ones. The governor broaden the Bureau investigation to question teachers and administrators. Prosecutors say former regional Superintendent Tamara Cotman, the first to face trial, told principles to ignore the GBI. Cotman is accused of swaddling the investigation and retaliating against those who didn't agree with her. Cotman has pleaded not guilty and her attorney says the prosecution got it completely wrong. Kathy Lohr NPR News, Atlanta.  
U.S. Stock's trading low with Dow off 47, it at 15,032, NASDAQ down 3 at 3600 as S&P 500 also down 7 points at 1649.  
  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/npr2013/8/230107.html