The United States has met another sad landmark in the COVID-19 pandemic with a reported 1 million deaths caused by the virus.
The first court case resulting from Special Counsel John Durham’s probe into the origins of the Trump-Russia allegation has begun and Michael Sussmann, a former lawyer for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign, has pleaded “not guilty” to accusations.
Investigators are seeking to determine whether authorities missed red flags left by the teenage gunman whom police say opened fire on several shoppers at a Buffalo, New York supermarket Saturday, killing 10 people and wounding three others.
Sweden’s governing party on Sunday said that it has approved a bid for NATO membership hours after Finland announced its intention to seek membership in the international military alliance.
Senators Tim Kaine (D-Va.) and Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) announced Friday that, following earlier efforts by Representatives Young Kim (R-Calif.) and Ami Bera (D-Calif.), they had joined forces in an effort to preserve a 2004 bill that grants assistance to people fleeing North Korea.
Missiles continue to pound eastern Ukraine even as world leaders say that Russia has failed to meet objectives in its “special military operation.
As the Biden administration deflects from the consequences of their spending spree, Americans continue to fill the pinch of tight finances as prices skyrocket on basic goods.
The Texas Department of Criminal Justice has announced a $50,000 reward for information leading to the capture of a convicted killer who stabbed a prison officer and hijacked a bus Thursday.
Throngs of pro-choice activists staged rallies across the United States Saturday, vowing perdition if the Supreme Court, Congress, or both did not create nationwide access to abortions.
An 18-year-old white gunman shot 10 people to death and wounded at a grocery store in a black neighborhood of Buffalo, New York, before surrendering after what authorities called an “act of racially motivated violent extremism.”