On June 9, 1994, the victim, who was 36 years old at the time, was walking home when she was approached from behind by a ...
Ross Ulbricht ran Silk Road, an online black market that moved $200 million worth of illegal drugs, distributed fake passports, helped hackers collaborate, and laundered money. He was also prosecuted ...
While the self-described “president of law and order” is dismantling accountability through pardons, Philly's local ...
In arguably the most consequential and dangerous act of his second administration so far, President Donald Trump issued ...
This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman, with Nermeen Shaikh. NERMEEN SHAIKH: President Trump is defending his decision to grant “full, complete and ...
Not one member of Indiana's Republican congressional delegation, all of whom swore to protect the U.S. Constitution, ...
Trump commuted the sentence of local Volusia County Proud Boys leader Joe Biggs, who was serving 17 years for his role in ...
Some in law enforcement fear a surge in violence by far-right groups; Proud Boys leader jokes he could serve in the cabinet as ‘Secretary of Retaliation.’ ...
In the days since President Trump’s sweeping clemency of Jan. 6 rioters, the federal courts have been busy processing the dismissals. But the judges who've spent years overseeing the hundreds of ...
"I believe God used us for a greater good," January 6 rioter Joseph Fischer told Newsweek after he was pardoned by President Donald Trump.
After taking the oath of office to protect the nation from enemies "both foreign and domestic," President Trump pardoned more than 1,500 convicted insurrectionists.
When a party’s leader claims to “back the blue” but pardons or frees those who assaulted police, some party members may feel dissonance. How do they reduce that dissonance?