house arrest
Texas woman accused of stabbing online date to avenge Iran's Soleimani reportedly banned from college classes
Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com. A Texas woman accused of stabbing her online date in a Nevada hotel-casino in March 2022 for retaliation of the 2020 death of an Iranian military leader has been banned from attending classes at the University of Texas in Dallas while on house arrest, according to reports. Nika Nikoubin, 22, was charged with attempted murder, battery with a deadly weapon and burglary in March 2022, according to KLAS in Las Vegas. Nikoubin reportedly met a man on a dating website and the two rented a room together at the Sunset Station hotel.
- North America > United States > Nevada > Clark County > Las Vegas (0.62)
- North America > United States > Texas > Dallas County > Dallas (0.17)
- North America > United States > Nevada > Clark County > Henderson (0.06)
- Asia > Middle East > Iran > Tehran Province > Tehran (0.06)
- Law Enforcement & Public Safety (1.00)
- Government > Military (1.00)
- Education > Educational Setting > Higher Education (0.51)
Bloody Las Vegas date in Iranian revenge plot ends with college ousting suspect enrolled during house arrest
Fox News contributor Gen. Keith Kellogg on Iran's president claiming former President Trump must be prosecuted for his involvement in the killing of Iranian Quds Force Commander Qassem Soleimani. A woman accused of luring a man to a Las Vegas area hotel and stabbing him in a revenge plot over the U.S. takedown of an Iranian general has been kicked off of a Texas campus where she had enrolled under the radar despite a Nevada judge ordering her house arrest. Officials at the University of Texas at Dallas told Fox News Digital Thursday that Nika Nikoubin was admitted to the school for the spring 2023 semester. "University officials recently became aware that she was charged with a crime and is under the jurisdiction of a Nevada court," the school said. "Because the safety of our campus and our community is of utmost importance, we have removed her from campus. The UT Dallas Police will monitor the student's compliance with the removal order."
- North America > United States > Nevada > Clark County > Las Vegas (0.68)
- North America > United States > Texas (0.49)
- Asia > Middle East > Lebanon > Beirut Governorate > Beirut (0.06)
- (2 more...)
- Government > Regional Government > North America Government > United States Government (1.00)
- Government > Military (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government > Asia Government > Middle East Government > Iran Government (0.52)
TX was not alerted when suspect in a NV stabbing moved to Dallas after posting bail, police claims
Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com. Texas authorities claim Nevada law enforcement failed to inform them when a woman accused of stabbing a man inside a Las Vegas-area hotel room in an apparent act of revenge relocated to Dallas. Nika Nikoubin, 22, has been on house arrest in Texas since at least June 2022 after posting bond and being released from a Las Vegas jail, court records show. She has pleaded not guilty to attempted murder and battery in connection with the March 5, 2022, stabbing at a casino-hotel southeast of Las Vegas.
- North America > United States > Nevada > Clark County > Las Vegas (0.78)
- North America > United States > Texas (0.53)
- North America > United States > South Carolina (0.06)
- North America > United States > Nevada > Clark County > Henderson (0.06)
Being Progressive Shouldn't Mean Being Anti-Algorithm
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, speaking at an event in January 2019 honoring the legacy of Dr. Luther King, said, "Algorithms are still made by human beings, and those algorithms are still pegged to basic human assumptions. And if you don't fix the bias, then you are just automating the bias." Though her comments were correct--algorithms can indeed reflect and exhibit human bias--Rep. Ocasio-Cortez's framing of the intersection of algorithms and fairness highlighted an often-ignored issue in progressive politics. The political movement, defined in part by its commitment to social justice, is unsurprisingly critical of the potential for algorithms, particularly AI, to facilitate discrimination, yet seemingly pays little attention to the ways in which algorithms can actually reduce discrimination.
- North America > United States > California (0.07)
- North America > United States > Texas > Bell County (0.05)
- Law (0.73)
- Government (0.51)
A Linguist Responds to Cormac McCarthy - Issue 48: Chaos
In his recent Nautilus essay, "The Kekulé Problem," Cormac McCarthy suggests that our unconscious mental processes are a modern echo of the prelinguistic minds of our prehistoric ancestors. He sees a stark contrast between language as a fairly recent cultural invention and the unconscious as an ancient biological system; the two are made from entirely different cloth, which is why, according to McCarthy, the unconscious is "loathe to speak to us." It is "just not used to giving verbal instructions and is not happy doing so," preferring to communicate with our consciousness in images and metaphors. As a linguist, I don't think I quite agree with the renowned novelist's characterization of the unconscious mind as fundamentally non-verbal--which I guess is Canadian polite-speak for: Wow, I really don't agree with that at all. The unconscious mind of the modern human--after language--is inexorably altered by it.