statement from police, they confirmed that a 52 year old woman was taken into custody as a suspect, and she is being questioned by detectives. you will remember that just over a couple of months ago, on the 5th of april, mrjohn s husband, peter murrell, former chief executive of the snp was also arrested in question. a big search operation took place at the home the couple share in the east of glasgow. many will remember those images of the big police tent, in the couples front garden. then, a couple weeks later, the party s former treasurer colin beattie was also arrested and questioned. both men were questioned for several hours by officers, but released without charge to. as the law stands in scotland, the police have the right to take somebody into custody for the legally defined period of up to 12 hours of questioning, before they have to be
Daylight Saving Time is here. We lost an hour of sleep this weekend, earning us the right to grumble about the time change for a few days. But is it permanent?
visitors. but i ve got to tell you this, that it backfired on him with the response of local officials. let me ask you this, though, the way the current law stands, when you have folks come to the border, they apply for asylum, as they re waiting for their cases to be heard, adjudicated, they can t. travel inside the u.s. and often do on their own. does that law need to be changed? i think the whole system obviously, jim, is broken, and we could deal with issues if we could ever get together, particularly on the senate side of things. we re not even dealing with people who were taken here as children, the daca children, the dreamers who came here and gainfully employed or in the military, in school by definition. so really, instead of these stunts, i hope we can get some bipartisan and bicameral help to deal with the problem and move
set out today. our religion editor, aleem maqbool, has this report. chelsie and chris got engaged at this very spot earlier this year. they decided they wanted their wedding day to reflect their beliefs as humanists, but as the law stands in england and wales, that wouldn t carry the same weight as, say, a church of england wedding. at the moment our humanist ceremony wouldn t be a legal ceremony, so whilst we can have a humanist ceremony with our friends and family and that be our real wedding to us, we still need to go away separately and have a civil marriage. but that s just one of many things that would change in what would be the most fundamental reform of wedding laws here in more than 150 years. because our law is so old, it has restrictions in it on where people can get married and on what they have to have by way of a ceremony that simply doesn t work for thousands of couples today, so rather than supporting people who want to get married, the law puts barriers in the way, an
out at the beach under proposals to tear up current restrictions on where weddings can be held. some of the most significant changes to wedding law in england and wales in more than a hundred years will be set out today. our religion editor aleem maqbool has this. chelsie and chris got engaged at this very spot earlier this year. they decided they wanted their wedding day to reflect their beliefs as humanists, but as the law stands in england and wales, that wouldn t carry the same weight as, say, a church of england wedding. at the moment our humanist ceremony wouldn t be a legal ceremony, so whilst we can have a humanist ceremony with our friends and family and that be our real wedding to us, we still need to go away separately and have a civil marriage. but that s just one of many things that would change in what would be the most fundamental reform of wedding laws here in more than 150 years. because our law is so old, it has restrictions in it on where people can get married and o