Tonight on FISM News: The DOJ addresses crime with a $1.6 billion grant, the U.S. and UK send cyber warfare experts to Ukraine, and a letter written by Charles Dickens goes up for auction.
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Tonight on FISM News: The DOJ addresses crime with a $1.6 billion grant, the U.S. and UK send cyber warfare experts to Ukraine, and a letter written by Charles Dickens goes up for auction.
The U.S. Department of Justice Office of Public Affairs on Monday issued a press release detailing a Kentucky federal court’s indictment of Mirsad Hariz Adem Ramic, 31, of Bowling Green, on charges that he and two co-conspirators provided “material support” to the Islamist terror group and participated in an ISIS military training camp.
This past week, Beasley tested positive for COVID-19 but appears to be experiencing mild symptoms. In response to certain criticism from the league and much of mainstream society, Beasley is taking this opportunity to highlight the inconsistencies in the NFL’s rules for vaccinated and unvaccinated players.
California joins New Mexico as it becomes the second state to require health care workers to receive a COVID-19 booster shot in order to remain employed.
Workers at Kellogg Co’s U.S. breakfast cereal plants voted in favor of a new contract that offers better terms for transitional employees and across-the-board wage increases, ending a weeks-long strike, the company said on Tuesday.
Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who last year proposed gutting $80 million from the city’s police budget, is now pleading for federal assistance to help deal with out-of-control crime.
Texas’ Harris County on Monday reported its first death related to the Omicron COVID-19 variant the county health department said.
President Biden still insists that he and Senator Joe Manchin will “get something done” on the Build Back Better (BBB) plan, just days after Manchin made it clear that he would not vote for the bill in its current state.
The United States has seen historically low growth rates in 2021, according to new data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that Russia had no room to retreat in a standoff with the United States over Ukraine and would be forced into a tough response unless the West dropped its “aggressive line”.