De Blasio's potential lack of access to
terror threats raised eyebrows in political and law - enforcement circles last year.
Not exact matches
UK
terror threat level
raised Following an attack outside an arena in Manchester that killed 22 and injured scores more Monday, British prime minister Theresa May put the country on its highest alert level, warning of the potential for an imminent follow - on attack.
Yesterday the government
raised its
terror threat level to critical after police confirmed an attack upon Glasgow airport was connected to the discovery of two car bombs in London on Friday.
The
terror attacks, which police quickly confirmed were believed to be connected, led to the government
raising the
threat level in the UK to critical, which suggests that another attack is imminent.
This means an attack is highly likely, and follows the
terror threat level temporarily being
raised to critical, meaning an attack may be imminent, on Friday evening.
On the day of a
terror attack where Britons were maimed, just hours after the
threat level is
raised, our only thoughts should be on service
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security
raised its
terror -
threat alert on Feb. 7 from yellow to orange to warn the public of a «high risk» of attacks on U.S. targets here and abroad in the coming weeks.
The legislation
raises a plethora of issues and significantly alters the security landscape: It gives the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) powers beyond intelligence gathering (to actively target
threats and derail plots); creates new offences (criminalizing «terrorist propaganda» and the «promotion of
terror»); lowers the legal threshold to trigger detention to those who may carry out an offence from the existing standard of will carry out to may carry out; extends preventive detention for «suspected» terrorists from three days to seven days (inconsistent with the constitutional presumption of innocence); legally entrenches a no fly list; and grants government agencies explicit authority to share private information with domestic and foreign entities.