Investigators reveal a mysterious delay in evacuating a crashed passenger jet; Saudi Arabia is caught pointing missile at its neighbors; The Fukushima Daiichi reactors are still leaking large amounts of radioactive water into the Pacific Ocean.  That and more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Boston marathon bombing suspect Dhokhar Tsarnaev pleaded not guilty to all charges at his court hearing today.  Some of the charges are punishable by the death penalty.  He’s accused of killing three people and injuring 264 more with two pressure cooker bombs detonated in the crowds observing the Boston Marathon in April.

The evacuation from Asiana Airlines Flight 214 that had just crashed at San Francisco International Airport was delayed for 90 seconds, at the order of the pilots.  It wasn’t until after a flight attendant spotted fire outside the wreck that passengers started to bail.  US safety investigators say, “We don't know what the pilots were thinking.”  Two people died and more than 180 passengers were hurt in Saturday’s crash.

The Prime Minister of Luxembourg is stepping down for his failure to control the tiny nation’s secret service, currently being investigated for illegal wiretapping, corruption, and dealing in stolen cars.  Former PM Jean-Claude Juncker himself was the highest-profile target of the illegal surveillance. 

Military analysts have discovered a hidden Saudi Arabian missile base that appears to be targeting both Israel and Iran with surface-to-surface missiles.  The 30-year old Chinese made DF-3s are mounted on mobile launchers and are pointed directly at the two nations, because they do not have remote controlled guidance capabilities.  The Saudis are not commenting on the revelation.

Japan’s nuclear watchdog group says the crippled Fukushima reactors are likely still leaking highly radioactive substances into the Pacific Ocean.  The Japan Nuclear Regulation Authority is criticizing the Tokyo Electric Power Company for failing to identify the leak.  Groundwater and soil samples taken at the scene show high concentrations of cancer-causing Strontium-90 and Cesium-134.  And that toxic groundwater is contaminating the ocean.

North and South Korea have not come to an agreement on the details of how to reopen the jointly-run Kaesong Industrial park, although the agreement in principle still stands.  The two sides will meet again next week. 

A Russian court on Thursday is expected to deliver a guilty verdict in the tax fraud trial of a dead guy.  Critics condemn the show trial of someone who isn’t around to defend himself.  Human rights advocates say Sergei Magnitsky was tortured to death by Russian prison guards with beatings and the refusal of proper medical care, because he had blown the whistle on extensive corruption in the Vladimir Putin government.  The egregiousness prompted the US to adopt “The Magnitsky Law” which blacklists Russian official accused of human rights violations.

Ireland’s Prime Minister Enda Kenny had corralled rogue ministers of his own party to secure votes for a bill to liberalize Women’s Reproductive Rights.  Some were against it because of allegiance to the Roman Catholic Church; some Liberals opposed it for not going far enough.  The bill would legalize abortion when the health of the mother is at risk.  Kenny's government drafted the bill after a miscarrying woman was refused an abortion and died from blood poisoning.