The parents of British teenager who was killed in a traffic accident involving an American diplomat's wife are planning a trip to the United States as they lobby for the woman's legal immunity to be lifted.
Harry Dunn was riding a motorcycle that collided with a car outside a British air force base in England. The August crash killed the 19-year-old Dunn.
The diplomat's wife subsequently left Britain. His family appealed Saturday for anyone who saw her departure to share information. Dunn's parents, Charlotte Charles and Tim Dunn, say they are going to New York and Washington to build support and to pressure U.S. authorities"to do the right thing." President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that U.S. officials would talk to the woman, whose name hasn't been officially released.
Deutschland Neuesten Nachrichten, Deutschland Schlagzeilen
Similar News:Sie können auch ähnliche Nachrichten wie diese lesen, die wir aus anderen Nachrichtenquellen gesammelt haben.
US futures point to higher open as US-China trade talks resumeHigh-level negotiators from the U.S. and China resumed trade talks in Washington on Thursday, following a week of rising tensions.
Weiterlesen »
'Americans sold us out,' Kurds guarding US base in Syria sayA few Kurdish forces guarding a US military base in northern Syria have told CNN that they feel they've been sold out by their American allies.
Weiterlesen »
Late Opera Star Jessye Norman's Hometown Honors Her LifeThe hometown of renowned opera star JessyeNorman is continuing four days of honoring her life.
Weiterlesen »
Poll: 81% Of Office Workers Would Rather Stay Late Than Ride Elevator With RichardBATON ROUGE, LA—More than four out of five employees at LaPorte Technical Infrastructures prefer working after hours to braving an elevator ride with Richard, an internal company survey revealed Tuesday. 'An overwhelming majority would opt to stay an extra half hour—even at the end of a long Friday—than share the same personal space with Richard for the 20 seconds it takes to get down to the lobby,' HR manager Andrea Tibbets said. 'When in the elevator with Richard, 45 percent of those polled said they avoid him by patting their pockets as if realizing they'd forgotten their keys, 29 percent pretend something is wrong with their phone, and 2 percent think maybe Richard's actually not that bad.' Company officials said they were planning to promote Richard in recognition of his role in helping to increase office-wide productivity by some 13 percent.
Weiterlesen »