Tiny downtown LA store near Skid Row sells winning Powerball jackpot ticket worth over $1 billion
The winner could take the $558.1 million lump sum before taxes, or get $1.08 billion paid out in yearly increments
The winner could take the $558.1 million lump sum before taxes, or get $1.08 billion paid out in yearly increments
The Venezuelan president was given a scale model of a jail that doubles as the headquarters of the Bolivarian Intelligence Service as a gift during a police promotion ceremony
The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department confirmed it served a search warrant Monday in the nearby city of Henderson. But the department said it wouldn’t release any other details
One week after targeting the network run by Los Chapitos, the Treasury Department has added an ally of La Nueva Familia Michoacana to its blacklist
What’s happened — and continues to happen — in Haiti, Colombia and Mexico should awaken our collective conscience about the use of women’s and girls’ bodies as a weapon of war
The Republican-led Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government is set to convene Thursday
Lorna Roxanne Green, 22, told investigators she broke in and used gasoline to set fire to the Wellspring Health Access clinic in Casper because it was giving her anxiety and nightmares
The committee’s legislation would impose new standards for transparency around recusals, gifts and potential conflicts of interest
Thousands of fires have scorched more than 42,000 square miles across the country so far, including Indigenous land, where communities often are isolated
Herzog is the second Israeli president, after his father, Chaim Herzog, to address Congress. His speech marks modern Israel’s celebration of its 75th year
The target letter sent to Trump by special counsel Jack Smith suggests Trump may soon be indicted on new federal charges, adding to a remarkable situation
The first lady says cancer patients need help making decisions about their treatment and that help from a navigator will make a big difference in people’s lives
The studios that employ actors and writers say their most recent contract offer includes generous increases in the payments
Shortly after his announcement, Chuck Morse, a former Republican president of the New Hampshire Senate who made an unsuccessful bid for U.S. Senate, announced his campaign
King’s family is struggling to understand what changed before he dashed into a country with a long history of holding Americans and using them as bargaining chips
Marc Tessier-Lavigne’s decision comes after the board of trustees launched a review in December following allegations of misconduct around papers he had authored or co-authored
The move comes after the Minnesota Supreme Court without comment denied Chauvin’s petition to hear his case, letting the former police officer’s conviction and 22-and-a-half-year sentence stand
U.S. District Judge Alvin K. Hellerstein’s decision sets the stage for Trump to stand trial in state court in Manhattan as early as next spring, overlapping with the 2024 presidential primary season
The director of the Americas Division of Human Rights Watch regrets that the final declaration of the EU-CELAC summit does not openly condemn the region’s authoritarian regimes
Christopher Michael Alberts’ prison sentence is one of the longest among hundreds of cases stemming from the riot on Jan. 6, 2021
The report was conducted by an independent monitor after an 8-year-old girl died in Border Patrol custody in May. She had sickle cell anemia and suffered a heart attack
Democratic Gov. Janet Mills signed a bill into law Wednesday that allows abortions at any time if deemed medically necessary by a doctor
The former president’s lawyers wanted the judge to reduce the award to less than $1 million or order a new trial on damages
Vice President Han Zheng told U.S. climate envoy John Kerry in Beijing that addressing climate change is ‘an important aspect of China-U.S. cooperation’ but is predicated on mutual respect
The National Weather Service has issued flash flood warnings and watches for the area where Kentucky, Illinois and Missouri meet at the convergence of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers
“It’s likely that North Korea will use the soldier for propaganda purposes in the short term,” said Yang Moo-jin, president of the University of North Korean Studies in South Korea
The new rule took effect May 11 with the expiration of a COVID-19 restriction known as Title 42 that had limited asylum seekers at the U.S.-Mexico border