PARSONS, West Virginia — Under a canopy of red and sugar maple, yellow poplar and sweet birch trees sits a colorful vernal riot of wildflowers like Canada violet, phlox and Solomon’s seal — and a case ...
Susan Logothetti and two colleagues stood outside the yellow home in Everett, Washington, donning T-shirts and holding flyers promoting a chewing gum company. Mitchell Gaff opened the door wearing ...
EVERETT, Wash. — A pair of decades-old murder cases were solved with an unlikely piece of evidence, and on Wednesday, convicted killer Mitchell Gaff was sentenced to 50 years to life in prison. Gaff, ...
WE’LL TIME IT ALL OUT. COMING UP IN WEATHERWATCH 12, A SMALL WEST WISCONSIN TOWN ROCKED AFTER THE DISCOVERY OF A 14 YEAR OLD GIRL WEIGHING JUST 35 POUNDS IN HER HOME. SOME GRUESOME DETAILS HERE. HER ...
Israeli authorities on Monday denounced as a “blood libel” a New York Times opinion story alleging widespread rape of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails ...
SNOHOMISH COUNTY, Wash. — A man who admitted to killing two women in separate Snohomish County cold cases from the 1980s was sentenced Wednesday afternoon in Snohomish County Superior Court. Mitchell ...
The Rhode Island Bar Association responded to criticism of U.S. District Judge Melissa R. DuBose. A Department of Homeland Security statement initially criticized the judge for releasing a man wanted ...
Strip away the moral theater and legal formalism, and a harder, more uncomfortable question emerges: “Is the ICC dispensing justice or staging relevance?” Because what we are witnessing may not just ...
The Supreme Court has just restored a woman's ability to obtain the abortion pill by mail without first seeing a medical provider, at least for now. A lower court had tried to tighten that easy access ...
Attorney Neal Katyal and Sara Albrecht, CEO of the Liberty Justice Center, during an interview outside the Supreme Court in Washington on Feb. 20. (Annabelle Gordon/Bloomberg via Getty Images) The ...
SAN DIEGO — Allow me to insert some lawyer language. Henceforth, the Supreme Court should avoid clumsily manhandling cases that involve the thorny topic of race. Why? Because at least six Justices -- ...