A First Look Inside Border Patrol's 'Iceboxes'
Images unsealed by a U.S. federal court in Tucson, Arizona, show migrants crammed into holding cells and huddling together for warmth.
Images unsealed by a U.S. federal court in Tucson, Arizona, show migrants crammed into holding cells and huddling together for warmth.
Officials are looking into whether a Muslim group’s religious freedoms were violated when the town rejected its plans to build the graveyard.
The news-gossip website that was bought this week by Univision announced Thursday it will cease operations next week.
The Justice Department announced it plans to stop using private prison to house inmates.
Residents of the Inupiat Eskimo village, identified as one of the communities most affected by coastal erosion, brought on by climate change, voted to leave their island for the mainland.
The wildfire has charred more than 25,000 acres and 80,000 people have been told to evacuate their homes.
The ride-hailing service plans to launch its first such fleet this month in Pittsburgh.
Southern Louisiana is drowning again. No one seems to care.
The city's medical examiner’s office has confirmed that an officer shot Paul O’Neal, an unarmed black man, in the back as he fled.
The Clayton Fire in Lake County and the Bluecut Fire in the San Bernardino National Forest are causing tens of thousands of residents to evacuate.
Anibal Mustelier is tied to a famous Florida bank heist, Colombian cartel murders in the 1980s, and even Cuban government assassinations.
The Blue Cut began as a small brush fire Tuesday and now threatens to destroy several towns in Southern California.
The GOP presidential nominee has hired a senior executive from Breitbart News and promoted a senior aide in an attempt to jump-start his foundering campaign.
Eight people died as rivers rose to historic highs and damaged 40,000 homes.
The Navajo Nation is suing the federal government over a spill that sent more than 3 million gallons of toxic water into a major river last year.
Over the weekend, a slow-moving storm pulled massive amounts of moisture inland from the Gulf of Mexico, dumping nearly two feet of water on Louisiana.
Kathleen Kane resigned Tuesday after she was found guilty on nine criminal charges, including criminal conspiracy and perjury.