The wrongfully deported Salvadoran father experienced ‘severe beatings, severe sleep deprivation, inadequate nutrition, and psychological torture’ inside notorious CECOT, lawsuit says
Articles from July 2025
Bloody handprints on truck link fugitive dad to murder of three daughters, police say
Travis Decker is wanted for the murders of his daughters last month in Washington State
Man charged with killing former Minnesota House speaker is due back in court after delay
The man accused of killing former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, and wounding a state senator and his wife, is due back in court after a week’s delay
For Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs, could a lesser conviction mean a greater public rehabilitation?
Sean “Diddy” Combs has been acquitted of the most serious sex trafficking charges against him and convicted of lesser ones
Massachusetts advocates fear Trump’s bill will unravel health safety net in Obamacare’s model state
In the state that served as the model for Obamacare, advocates and health care workers fear the Trump administration is trying to dismantle the program piece-by-piece
Judge blocks Trump’s asylum ban at southern border saying he exceeded authority
A federal judge ruled Wednesday that an executive order by President Donald Trump suspending asylum access at the southern border is unlawful
Family of Kohberger murder victim rails against judge and prosecutors after plea deal avoids death penalty
Bryan Kohberger pleaded guilty to killing four Idaho college students in November 2022
Military leaders aghast as Meta founder Zuckerberg crashes classified Oval Office meeting on fighter jets: report
Facebook mogul’s sudden appearance is increasingly typical of freewheeling West Wing during Donald Trump’s second term, which president has reportedly nicknamed ‘Grand Central Terminal’
Six Flags to close another park months after announcing the closure of its Maryland location
Six Flags said its parks in Santa Clara, California, and Bowie, Maryland, are ‘very low on the rankings of margins’
I was feet away as Bryan Kohberger admitted to four brutal murders. It was chilling how normal it all seemed to him
More than two years after Bryan Kohberger slaughtered four college students at their home in Moscow, Idaho, he stood in front of the victims’ families and for the first time, admitted to the heinous murders. Andrea Cavallier reports on the feeling inside the Idaho courtroom.