Steve Bannon is expected to face a new charge Thursday. He’s being sentenced in October in another case related to defying the Jan. 6 committee.
Author: Kevin McCoy, USA TODAY
Questions about Mar-a-Lago search? Here’s how warrants, subpoenas and grand juries work
The FBI’s search of former President Donald Trump’s Florida home raises questions about search warrants, subpoenas and grand juries. We have answers.
Speech and debate students say Ketanji Brown Jackson aced her Supreme Court confirmation hearing
Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s handling of Senate confirmation hearing wins high marks from school debaters who view her as one of their own
Cities sue ‘ghost gun’ parts manufacturers as homemade firearms are tied to more crimes
Firms selling “80% build kits” enable anyone to build untraceable ghost guns. Cities are suing, saying the guns have been tied to crimes.
Officials: 8 dead, including teens; ‘scores’ injured at concert during Astroworld Festival in Texas
The Houston Fire Chief said the compression of the crowd toward the stage occurred while rapper Travis Scott was performing Friday night.
‘Condo wars:’ Surfside association fighting in Florida was extreme, but it’s a familiar battle for HOAs
Infighting and financial battles play out across the nation in condos, homeowner associations and co-ops — roughly 380,000 associations in all.
12 dead in Alabama due to Claudette, including 9 children in multi-vehicle crash; storm to strengthen on way to East Coast
At least 12 died in Alabama as Claudette continues to slam the South, including nine children in a multi-vehicle crash.
When your biological father is your mother’s fertility doctor: DNA tests reveal cases of ‘fertility fraud’
Former patients have sued their fertility doctors after DNA tests such as 23andMe and AncestryDNA showed the doctor was the father of their children.
The pandemic forced judges to let livestream cameras into court. The Chauvin trial showed it could work. Will it last?
The pandemic has accomplished what transparency advocates could not: It has thawed opposition to widespread use of cameras and microphones in courts.
‘Afraid of dying in here’: How inmates fought for COVID vaccinations, protections after jails and prisons failed to protect them
In dozens of lawsuits, inmates argued that jails and prisons violated their constitutional rights by failing to protect them against the coronavirus.