New Jan. 6 Riot Footage
“You are going to die if you don’t get out of the way!” Disturbing new footage from the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol riots shows the mob threatening police officers as they force their way through Congress.
The Filipino American family who was threatened and physically attacked by a man at a McDonald’s drive-thru in North Hollywood, California, last month will seek an extraction order on their assailant. Patricia Roque, 19, expressed her frustration at her family’s ongoing case against Nicholas Weber, who faces hate crime charges, as he refused to attend his arraignment for the third time. “It’s very frustrating,” Patricia told migrant rights advocate Xenia Tupas on June 24.
In emotional testimony Monday, the father of Tanner Dashner testified his son knew right from wrong and called what happened 'a terrible mistake'
Employees told police the customer was upset about $2.00 worth of change and chicken sandwiches.
Rudy Giuliani said he felt like someone had shot him and suggested he could have "hit the ground" and cracked his skull.
Officer Garrett Hull was shot while tracking Timothy Huff and two other men suspected in a string of robberies targeting Hispanic-run businesses in 2018.
via Facebook/Rudy GiulianiFormer New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani doubled down Monday on his wildly overblown characterization that he was brutally assaulted by a Staten Island grocery store worker over the weekend, despite security footage showing the man only tapped his back.Speaking to about 200 people in a Facebook Live, Giuliani called the viral security footage “deceptive.” He claimed the pat packed so much vigor it nearly knocked him and a friend to the ground, but he was able to stay upright
Too much mayonnaise on a sandwich led a disgruntled customer to kill a woman and injure another.
Video of Nayera Ashraf's brutal killing by a man whose marriage proposal she rejected went viral. A prominent Islamic leader suggested it was her fault.
One person was stabbed in the back, deputies say.
A video that is going viral appears to show a police officer pushing a man — forcing another to fall to the ground — then striking a second man
The Rincon Police Department says the driver purposely drove around a barricade and headed toward people on the parade route on Saturday.
Just because the handgun permit requirement has gone a way doesn't mean July 1 will open the gates to a firearm free-for-all.
Jacob Rupert, of Saxonburg, walked into court Monday morning a free man and walked out in handcuffs and headed to jail.
A Uvalde mother who rushed past police to save her children during last month's shooting is now being harassed by law enforcement, her lawyer says.
The sheriff's office said Shamia Jatoya Tillman entered the Wendy's angry over a drive-through window food order.
Both women were serving sentences for theft and were set to be released in 2023.
The FBI warned Asian American business owners in New Jersey to be vigilant as they face an increased risk of being burglarized by sophisticated criminal groups. There have been an increasing number of reports from Asian business owners over the past three years who have been targeted by “sophisticated criminal enterprises,” according to Supervisory Special Agent Mike Ratta of the FBI field office in Newark.
A Salisbury woman pleaded guilty last week in federal court in Boston to the sexual exploitation of an infant, officials announced Monday. Desiree Daigle, 26, pleaded guilty to sexually exploiting a child in connection with an incident in November 2018, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Daigle was identified in online chats exchanging various child pornography files with another individual.
(Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday made it harder for prosecutors to win convictions of doctors accused of running "pill mills" and excessively prescribing opioids and other addictive drugs, by requiring the government to prove that defendants knew their prescriptions had no legitimate medical purpose. The 9-0 ruling, authored by liberal Justice Stephen Breyer, sided with Xiulu Ruan and Shakeel Kahn, who argued that their trials were unfair because jurors were not required to consider whether the two convicted doctors had "good faith" reasons to believe the numerous opioid prescriptions were medically valid.
Curtis Smith, longtime friend of Alex Murdaugh, is alleged to have helped the disgraced lawyer launder as much as $2 million in alleged fraud schemes.