(Headline USA) A Surfside, Florida official pushed back Sunday on the idea that the town was responsible for slowing down a condo board's plans to make needed structural repairs to a building that eventually collapsed, killing dozens.
Following a Miami Herald report that it took more than a month for the...
(Associated Press) Cybersecurity teams worked feverishly Sunday to stem the impact of the single biggest global ransomware attack on record, with some details emerging about how the Russia-linked gang responsible breached the company whose software was the conduit.
An affiliate of the notorious REvil gang, best known for extorting $11...
(Associated Press) Demolition specialists bored holes for explosives Sunday as they prepared to bring down the precarious but still-standing portion of a collapsed South Florida condo building. The work has suspended the search-and-rescue mission, but officials said it should eventually open up new areas for rescue teams to explore.
The...
(The Center Square, Benjamin Yount) The Republican lawmaker leading hearings into how outside money impacted the 2020 elections says even more cash is going to come pouring into Wisconsin thanks to Gov. Tony Evers.
The governor on Wednesday vetoed a plan to outlaw so-called "Zuckerbucks" from the state’s elections.
"Zuckerbucks" are...
(The Center Square, Tim Gruver) Mayor Jenny Durkan wants to fill the downtown storefronts that COVID-19 and weeks of CHOP protesting emptied.
The proposed ordinance would relax Seattle's permit rules, expanding the range of businesses that can set up shop downtown. They could include medical offices, gyms, art installations and...
(Associated Press) The Boy Scouts of America have reached an $850 million agreement with attorneys representing some 60,000 victims of child sex abuse in what could prove to be a pivotal moment in the organization’s bankruptcy case.
The agreement filed in court by BSA attorneys late Thursday would mark one of...
Senate Republicans demanded answers from Attorney General Merrick Garland about a recent Biden appointee’s role in the Justice Department, given her "bias" against special counsel John Durham’s ongoing investigation into the origins of the Russia-Gate hoax.
Susan Hennessy, a former NSA attorney who was appointed to the DOJ in May,...
(Headline USA) One Missouri hospital official is telling anyone making disparaging remarks about the COVID-19 vaccine to "Shut up."
"If you are making wildly disparaging comments about the vaccine, and have no public health expertise, you may be responsible for someone's death. Shut up," tweeted Steve Edwards, who is the...
(Headline USA) President Joe Biden on Friday called for a bipartisan agreement to give American citizenship to millions of illegal aliens.
"We need an immigration system that both reflects our values and upholds our laws. We can do both," Biden said at a naturalization ceremony at the White House.
The president...
(Associated Press) A coalition of Minnesota's largest law enforcement groups sued the state Friday seeking to overturn a state law that changed the standard for justified use of deadly force by police.
The lawsuit claims the law, which took effect in March, violates officers' rights to self-defense and unconstitutionally compels...
(Associated Press) A federal appeals court on Friday threw out a Trump-era Environmental Protection Agency rule change that allowed for the sale of a 15% ethanol gasoline blend in the summer months.
The decision deals a significant blow to the ethanol industry and corn farmers who grow the crop from...
Facebook, a social media platform that censors scientific data and silences political dissent, now warns users that they may have absorbed "extremist content" or that their friends may become "extremists," Reclaim the Net reported.
Two notifications pop up for some Facebook accounts.
The first prompt asks, "Are you concerned that someone...