Chicago Files Civil Complaint Against ‘Empire’ Actor Jussie Smollett
The city maintains that Smollett filed a false police report and is seeking repayment of the costs incurred in investigating it.
The city maintains that Smollett filed a false police report and is seeking repayment of the costs incurred in investigating it.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell acknowledged that Republicans need to regain support with women and college graduates in the suburbs — which he said led to loss of the House in 2018.
The state Senate passed a bill Thursday repealing capital punishment. The governor has threatened to veto it, but supporters have enough votes to override a veto.
The ACLU of Ohio and other organizations that advocate for abortion rights will sue to block the law, one of most restrictive in the country. “We’re counting on [a lawsuit],” say the law’s supporters.
The novel earned Jones the $35,000 award for tackling difficult social issues in fiction. The prize’s head judge says the book is “going to have a place in the literary imagination for a long time.”
Israeli scientists are studying what caused an engine failure in the closing minutes of what they hoped would be a historic lunar landing.
The decision ends a legal battle in which the Navy blamed Cmdr. Bryce Benson and Lt. Natalie Combs for what it called an “avoidable” accident. The move is likely to end their naval careers.
Two popes speaking simultaneously on the most divisive issue facing the church is remarkable. Benedict’s letter may well raise concerns that the Vatican can no longer speak with a single voice.
The Trump administration gave transgender service members a deadline to secure a medical diagnosis before the new ban took hold. But military families are struggling with the accelerated timeline.
The springtime storm is bringing blizzard conditions to states throughout the Plains and Midwest. Minnesota braced to face the brunt of the storm Thursday.
The lawyer, who represented Stormy Daniels and is already facing federal financial crimes charges, has been indicted on 36 counts of embezzlement and fraud by a California federal grand jury.
The well-known D.C. lawyer stepped down from a powerful law firm that has been ensnared in the Russia investigation over failure to disclose work for a foreign client as required by an obscure law.
The impact of WikiLeaks on the world’s politics, journalism and culture has been transformative. Here are the highlights.
At the largest refugee camp in the world, Rohingya refugees and aid agencies face numerous challenges. Now they’re also dealing with an outbreak of chickenpox.
The actor talks with Fresh Air‘s Terry Gross about struggling with typecasting after Happy Days, his family’s immigration story and about how he found out in his 30s that he had dyslexia.
For most students, figuring out where to go to college is closely linked with, “How am I gonna pay for it?” The answer — sort of — comes in lots of confusing terms and jargon.
Watch as the city of Los Angeles celebrates a neighborhood hero, live from the Staples Center, at 10 a.m. PT/12 p.m. ET.
A new report by the Brennan Center found that automatic voter registration in states has given a big boost to voter rolls in states where it’s been adopted.
Police investigating three recent attacks on historically black churches in Louisiana have arrested Holden Matthews, 21, a white male who is the son of a St. Landry Parish sheriff’s deputy.
Omar Barghouti is one of the founders of a Palestinian-led boycott movement intended to pressure Israel on its occupation of the West Bank. His visa to enter the U.S. has apparently been revoked.
President Trump issues two executive orders that could make it harder for states to block companies from building oil and gas pipeline projects.
The families allege the school board, sheriff’s office and others in Broward County failed to prevent the 2018 attack at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that left 17 people dead.
Journalist Charles Lane’s account is endlessly gripping — and he does an excellent job of placing the operation in historical context, chronicling racism and resentment in the South post-Civil War.
Sudan’s defense minister says a transitional military council will rule the country for two years — a plan that doesn’t satisfy many of the thousands who demanded a regime change.
Rancher Hugh Fitzsimmons has dealt with migrants crossing his ranch in southwestern Texas for years. To understand the migrants, he says we need to try to put ourselves in each others’ shoes.
The WikiLeaks founder had been holed up in Ecuador’s embassy in London since 2012. He was arrested on a warrant from 2012 for failing to surrender to the court and also on behalf of the United States.
It will be the first meeting for Moon Jae-in and President Trump since the failed summit in Hanoi, which ended with no agreement between Trump and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un on denuclearization.
“Medicare for America” would stop short of a full-blown expansion of Medicare. It would include copays from patients and a role for insurers. Could it survive health care’s politics?
Frustrated by the British Parliament’s failure to develop its Brexit plan, EU leaders offered a compromise extension. Now the U.K. has to renew its efforts to agree on terms for the divorce.
The heavyweight Democratic lawyer and former top Obama counsel has been on the watch for an indictment connected to his onetime work with Paul Manafort. Now his own attorneys say it’s at hand.
The National Enquirer has given President Trump favorable coverage. It also is accused of keeping a lid on an alleged Trump affair by paying a woman for her exclusive story and then not publishing it.
Steven Mnuchin wrote to the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee that he needs more time to consult with the Justice Department because of the “unprecedented nature of this request.”
The Army and Air Force Exchange Service initially recommended that facilities feature sports programming. An updated memo tells facilities to make adjustments based on “the news of the day.”
Lawmakers across party lines voted overwhelmingly to ban the weapons after a massacre in Christchurch killed 50 worshippers. Owners have until the end of September to hand the weapons over to police.
The companies belonging to the family of West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice owe millions for mine safety violations. Justice promised to pay the bill when he was running for governor in 2016, but hasn’t.
Fisher-Price’s Rock ‘n Play sleeper has been linked to 32 infant deaths. Now the consumer safety agency is considering asking the company to recall the product.