The men convicted, then acquitted of kidnapping and beheading Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in 2002 must be released, Pakistan’s Supreme Court ruled Thursday, dismissing appeals by both ...
A reluctant celebrity, she was thrust into the spotlight after his brutal death, and created a foundation in his memory to promote cultural understanding. By Clay Risen The court ordered the release ...
ISLAMABAD (AP) - Pakistan’s Supreme Court ordered the release Thursday of a Pakistani-British man convicted and later acquitted in the beheading of American journalist Daniel Pearl in 2002. The court ...
This story is free to read because readers choose to support LAist. If you find value in independent local reporting, make a donation to power our newsroom today. Pearl died last month. Nineteen years ...
Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl, who was beheaded five years ago by terrorists in Pakistan, was honored Sunday with the Holocaust Museum Houston's Lyndon Baines Johnson Moral Courage Award ...
India's precision strikes codenamed 'Operation Sindoor' launched in retaliation to barbaric Pahalgam terror attack which killed 26 innocent civilians, also brought ...
For journalist Daniel Pearl, his violin was almost as essential as his notepad. In troubled hot spots around the world, he would whip out his instrument and instigate impromptu jam sessions with ...
KARACHI, Pakistan - A provincial court in Pakistan ordered the release of a British-born Pakistani man charged in the 2002 murder of American journalist Daniel Pearl. The Sindh High Court's release ...
The Boston Globe reports this morning that Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl was baptized posthumously in a Mormon temple in Idaho last year. Pearl was Jewish and was captured and killed by ...
Slain Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl will be honored posthumously with this year's Lyndon Baines Johnson Moral Courage Award sponsored by the Holocaust Museum Houston, the museum announced ...
Daniel Pearl made his name at the Wall Street Journal writing “A-heads,” those quirky and colorful feature articles that run down the middle of the paper’s front page, and in a macabre way his own ...