Family of woman killed with an AR-15 protests for justice, wants juvenile charged as adult
Family members of a woman brutally killed while driving home from dinner on February 20 took to the streets in protest Friday night.
Get your hydrogen peroxide and a toothbrush ready. Your rarely-cleaned bath mat is in need of a good scrubbing.
The lawsuit filed against police says the vicitm now experiences fear, trauma and anxiety whenever she leaves her home
In comments to The Independent, spokesman for Greene brings up abortion, Boebert mentions growing national debt as reasons for voting against legislation
‘An attorney who works in this office failed to fully inform himself before speaking in court’
‘We see what Russia is doing to undermine our democracies’, foreign minister says
‘When I saw him, he looked healthier and in better physical condition than I had seen him in a long time,’ a Trump advisor says
MTG says a debate ‘would be informative for the American People’ with her degree in business administration and AOC’s degree in economics
‘Thank God the light finally changed and I was able to drive off’, said victim after abuse
Médecins Sans Frontières says country has been plunged into ‘permanent state of mourning’
‘A bottle of water knocked you out? Hahahaha’
‘Gutfeld! will be back tomorrow,’ news anchor Shannon Bream abruptly announced on Tuesday, just as the comedy show was supposed to begin
The company’s revenue has tripled since the change was implemented
Google broke Australian law by misleading users about personal location data collected through Android mobile devices, a judge found Friday. The Federal Court decision was a partial win for the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, the nation’s fair trade watchdog, which has been prosecuting Google for broader alleged breaches of consumer law since October 2019. Justice Thomas Thawley found that Google misled Android mobile device users about personal location data collected between January 2017 and December 2018.
Pro-UK parties could yet stop an independence majority at Holyrood because even “hardline” SNP voters are unsure about Nicola Sturgeon’s mid-pandemic push for a new referendum, the Lib Dem leader has claimed. Launching his party’s manifesto, Willie Rennie said the SNP vote was “softer than I’ve ever seen it” in the current campaign and insisted it was “all to play for”. He predicted that momentum could rapidly swing away from the nationalists in the final weeks of the campaign, despite opinion polls currently suggesting a pro-independence majority after May 6 is a near certainty. The Lib Dems have said the next Holyrood term should be focused on recovery from the pandemic rather than a new independence vote. The party is proposing large increases to spending on mental health services, a jobs guarantee for young people and play-based education up to the age of seven. It also published proposals for MSPs to be able to vote to hold Scottish ministers in "contempt of parliament" after the SNP repeatedly defied votes in the previous term. The Lib Dems won just five seats at Holyrood in 2016 but Mr Rennie insisted his party had the potential to make gains across Scotland, highlighting Caithness, Sutherland and Ross as a seat he believes he can take from the SNP. “There's a lot to play for, and the vote amongst the SNP is softer than I have ever seen it,” Mr Rennie said. “The hesitation amongst the SNP voters is considerable. “There was a lady I met the other day, she's been a hardline SNP supporter all of her life. She said she was just not sure this time, and [her reasons were] Alex Salmond and pushing an independence referendum in the middle of a pandemic.” He also claimed that centrist Tory voters were moving to the Lib Dems because they were put off by a “harder, darker edge” to the Conservatives under Douglas Ross. He claimed socially liberal voters attracted by the “bubbly and bright” Ruth Davidson at the last election did not like the current incumbent. Mr Rennie said the Tories had adopted more right wing positions under Mr Ross and cited a masked photocall on a military jeep as an example in which he “just looked a bit darker”.
The Bronx rapper called out Republicans in the wake of Daunte Wright’s death
The film starring Lady Gaga, Adam Driver, and Al Pacino as members of the Gucci family is set for a November release.
Dan Price was labelled a socialist by Fox News - but now his company is worth $10 billion. Kate Ng looks at how
Parcel firm ‘shocked and saddened’ after shooting spree at facility, with police investigating
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The rags-to-riches rise of a fiercely anti-communist Hong Kong tycoon who ended up in jail for protesting.