Pandora Charms Bracelets A US federal jury has convicted five police officers in New Orleans over fatal shootings in the
chaotic aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
Two unarmed residents were killed and four others wounded in the incident on the Danziger Bridge after the 2005 storm.
But the jury decided that neither of the fatal shootings was a murder.
The five officers were convicted of violations stemming from the cover-up of the deaths.
Four of the men were also found guilty of civil rights violations.
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Former officers Robert Faulcon, Anthony Villavaso, Sgt Robert Gisevius and Sgt Kenneth Bowen were convicted of taking part in the shootings that killed James Brissette, 17, and
Ronald Madison, 40, as well as the alleged cover-up.
Retired officer Sgt Arthur Kaufman, who investigated the shootings, was charged only in the alleged cover-up.
Most of New Orleans was flooded by the hurricane and there was widespread looting and violence in the storm's aftermath.
'Falsify reports'
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During the five-week trial, prosecutors said that police shot six unarmed people on the Danziger Bridge on the morning of 4 September 2005, less than one week after the storm
struck New Orleans.
The US justice department said that the evidence at the trial had established that three officers opened fire on an unarmed family on the east side of the bridge, killing a 17-
year-old boy and wounding four other members of the family.
Minutes later, according to testimony, a second shooting occurred on the west side of the bridge, where officers shot at two brothers - Lance and Ronald Madison. Forty-year-old
Ronald, who had severe mental disabilities, was shot dead as he tried to run away.
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In closing testimony on Tuesday, Assistant US Attorney Theodore Carter said police had no justification for shooting unarmed people attempting to cross the Danziger in search of
food days after Katrina struck.
"It was unreasonable for these officers to fire even one shot, let alone dozens," he had said.
'Healing power'
Lawyers representing the officers argued the police were shot at before they returned fire and believed their lives were in danger.
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But, according to the US justice department, Kaufman and the other officers tried to make the shootings appear justified by creating a cover-up.
Kaufman claimed to have found a gun - which he had actually taken from his own home - on the bridge the day after the shooting. He also invented fictional witnesses and witness
statements to justify the officer's actions. He faces a maximum sentence of 120 years in prison.
Since Katrina, the New Orleans police department has been the target of allegations of corruption and brutality.
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"This was a critical verdict. I cannot overstate the importance of this verdict," US Attorney Jim Letten said.
"The power, the message it sends to the community, the healing power it has," he added.
Last year, New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu described the city's police department as "one of the worst" in the country, and asked the US government to aid reform efforts.
The officers will be sentenced in mid-December. Some face potential multiple life sentences.
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A US man charged with sending more than 27 million spam messages to Facebook users has turned himself in.
Sanford Wallace, who is known as the "Spam King", surrendered to FBI agents in California.
Prosecutors allege he developed a program that breached Facebook spam filters and lured users to submit their account details.
Mr Wallace denies the charges, which carry prison sentences of up to 10 years.
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He has been released on $100,000 (£61,000) bail.
Prosecutors say Mr Wallace's program posted messages on Facebook users walls - purportedly from friends - urging users to visit a website where their account details were then
harvested.
They were then redirected to an affiliate website that earned Wallace "substantial revenue", the charges say.
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The program also retrieved lists of Facebook users' friends and posted spam messages on their walls, the indictment adds.
About 500,000 Facebook accounts were compromised between November 2008 and March 2009, leading to more than 27 million spam messages being sent, prosecutors said.
Mr Wallace, who is from Las Vegas, is charged with six counts of electronic mail fraud, three counts of intentional damage to a protected computer and two counts of criminal
contempt.
Facebook sued Mr Wallace in 2009 and a federal judge ordered him not to access Facebook's computer network. However, prosecutors say he repeatedly violated that order earlier
this year.
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Mr Wallace also lost a civil case brought against him by MySpace in 2008 over junk messages sent to members of the social networking site.
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