Donald Trump’s libel lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal and Rupert Murdoch has been assigned to Darrin P Gayles, a US district judge for the southern district of Florida.
Trump’s lawsuit on Friday, which also targets Dow Jones and News Corp, was filed in the southern district of Florida federal court in Miami.
“This document shows an extreme lack of effort and due diligence in the FBI’s investigation of former Secretary Clinton’s email usage and mishandling of highly classified information,” Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) said of the watchdog report.
Democratic Party approval ratings hit record lows as frustrated Democrats urge stronger opposition to President Donald Trump's agenda, while Republicans maintain higher party support.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem pays hospital visit to off-duty Customs and Border Protection officer who allegedly was shot in NYC over the weekend.
Supposing humanity is still around billions of years from now, scientists say it's unlikely we would notice any distinct changes while the big crunch takes place.
New York City Democratic nominee Zohran Mamdani has turned a White House press secretary's mispronunciation of his name into a viral moment amid his campaign for New York City mayor.
The Trump administration and lawyers for Kilmar Abrego Garcia reached an agreement to delay his deportation for a period of 30 days while his criminal case proceeds in Tennessee.
The fatal crash of a Bangladesh air force training aircraft into a college campus left 19 dead and 164 injured on Monday. The jet was reportedly experiencing a technical issue.
Investigators found the Jeju Air flight crash-landed with only its badly damaged right engine on, but experts warned against drawing early conclusions.
Israel's visa application process for evangelicals faced bureaucratic hurdles until U.S. Ambassador Huckabee threatened reciprocal treatment for Israeli citizens seeking U.S. travel.
Between President Donald Trump claiming there’s a flood of fentanyl from Canada to the U.S., and people here insisting there’s almost none, the truth is elusive. A new American report gets to the bottom of what’s really going on, and its author, Jonathan Caulkins, talks to Brian about what he found. Specializing in crime systems, the professor from Carnegie Mellon University's Heinz College breaks down how global supply chains run by criminal organizations moving from Mexico to China to Australia feed Canadian labs with precursor chemicals. And how much of the final made-in-Canada product actually ends up on America’s streets — including, unexpectedly, in Alaska. Read More