
Two men plead not guilty to federal terrorism charges in NYC bombing case
Two defendants accused of throwing homemade explosives during a March incident in New York City entered not guilty pleas to federal terrorism charges.

Two defendants accused of throwing homemade explosives during a March incident in New York City entered not guilty pleas to federal terrorism charges.

The director of Camp Mystic testified he was unaware of federal and state warnings issued before a 2025 flood that killed 27 people.

A Utah judge has unsealed an ATF ballistics report in the case against Tyler Robinson, accused of assassinating Charlie Kirk.

Two separate immigration detention cases emerge involving women with different circumstances and legal outcomes.

Athena Strand's mother testified at the capital murder trial of former FedEx driver Tanner Horner, who pleaded guilty to killing the child.

Turkish authorities report school shooter used imagery referencing 2014 U.S. mass killer, while three New York teens were arrested for allegedly planning copycat attack.

Omaha police fatally shot a woman who allegedly cut a 3-year-old child with a knife during a kidnapping attempt at a Walmart location.

Severe weather system moving across the Midwest has caused flooding that closed highways in Milwaukee and resulted in at least one lightning-related death in Wisconsin.

A Yale committee issued critical findings about academia's role in higher education problems as Ohio State University confronts various institutional issues.

Ashly Robinson, known online as Ashlee Jenae, died during a trip to Zanzibar with her fiancé, prompting a police investigation.

Police deployed riot units in Epsom after protesters gathered demanding information about suspects in a reported rape case outside a local church.

Benjamin Field, a former church warden jailed for life in 2019 for murdering university lecturer Peter Farquhar, has had his conviction quashed.

An inquiry chair concluded the Southport attack was preventable if authorities and the perpetrator's parents had acted more quickly.

Nine universities are taking legal action after 22,000 students in England were told they received loans in error and must repay immediately.

City officials cite declining property crime rates while federal survey data indicates majority of victims don't report crimes to police.
Page 1 of 31 (453 stories)