US court blocks execution of Muslim inmate who requested imam

This undated handout photograph obtained February 4, 2019 courtesy of the Alabama Department of Corrections shows Dominique Ray, a Muslim death row inmate in the conservative southern US state of Alabama. (AFP / Alabama Department of Corrections handout)
Updated 07 February 2019
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US court blocks execution of Muslim inmate who requested imam

  • The 11th US ircuit Court of Appeals said on Wednesday it had granted an indefinite stay for Dominique Ray
  • Ray was convicted in the fatal stabbing of 15-year-old Tiffany Harville Alabama in about July 1995

NEW YORK: A US federal court blocked Thursday’s scheduled execution of a Muslim inmate in Alabama on grounds the state may be violating his religious rights by refusing to allow an imam to be present at his death.
The 11th US ircuit Court of Appeals said on Wednesday it had granted an indefinite stay for Dominique Ray, 42, a day before he was scheduled to be executed by lethal injection for the killing of a 15-year-old girl more than 23 years ago.
A three-judge panel wrote that it appeared Alabama might be in violation of the Establishment Clause of the US Constitution’s First Amendment, which deals with religious rights.
The state on Wednesday appealed the stay of execution.
The Alabama Department of Corrections (ADOC) denied Ray’s request to have his imam at his execution, saying that only ADOC employees could be present in the execution chamber, the state said in a court document.
A prison chaplain employed by the department is allowed to be present at executions but other spiritual advisers must witness executions from a viewing room, according to the state.
Ray was convicted in the fatal stabbing of 15-year-old Tiffany Harville, who disappeared from her home in Selma, Alabama, in July 1995. Her body was found in a field a month later.

 

 

 


Nvidia expands AI empire with Groq talent grab

Updated 5 sec ago
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Nvidia expands AI empire with Groq talent grab

  • Under an agreement, Groq founder Jonathan Ross and other team members will join Nvidia to help develop and scale the Groq’s technology
  • Nvidia’s domination of the AI training chip market has made it the world’s biggest company by market valuation, but it faces increasing competition 

SAN FRANCISCO, California: Nvidia has hired the leadership of a promising AI chip startup, a statement said Wednesday, as the artificial intelligence giant expands its tech empire.
Chip maker Groq said the departure of its top executives was part of a non-exclusive licensing agreement with Nvidia for its inference technology, as both companies seek to expand access to low-cost AI processing.
Under the agreement, Groq founder Jonathan Ross and president Sunny Madra, along with other team members, will join Nvidia to help develop and scale the Groq’s technology.
Nvidia’s domination of the AI training chip market has made it the world’s biggest company by market valuation, but it faces increasing competition in the inference segment from specialized startups like Groq.
AI inference refers to the process of running pre-trained AI models to make predictions or generate responses — such as when ChatGPT answers a user’s question or when an image recognition system identifies objects in a photo.
Groq will remain an independent company under new chief executive Simon Edwards, the firm said in a short statement.
The release of the statement shortly followed a report by CNBC that Nvidia was buying Groq outright for $20 billion, though a source close to the matter told AFP that no sale had taken place.
The arrangement resembles an “acquihire” — a practice increasingly common in Silicon Valley where larger tech companies poach key staff from smaller firms, leaving a small remnant of the company behind.
The practice is largely designed to evade the scrutiny of competition regulators that have become skittish about tech giants snapping up promising companies that stand a chance of becoming rivals.
Recent examples include Microsoft’s deal with AI startup Inflection AI in 2024, which saw co-founder Mustafa Suleyman and much of the team join Microsoft while the company remained independent.
Google has also made similar moves, bringing on teams from AI startups like Character.AI in 2024.
Meta’s 2025 deal to invest $14.3 billion in Scale AI and hire its CEO, Alexandr Wang, to lead its new “superintelligence” AI lab is considered one of the biggest acquihires yet.