Fires burned across protest sites in France and more than 1,300 people were detained as violent demonstrations over the killing of a 17-year-old shot by police raged for a fourth night.
If liberals expected a big course correction from a Supreme Court mired in ethics controversies and rocked by record-low approval ratings, the justices’ final decisions of the term laid that to rest.
Hunter Biden's lawyer sent a searing letter Friday to the Republican chairman of the House Ways & Means Committee, slamming him for releasing the testimony of two IRS whistleblowers.
Special counsel Jack Smith is reportedly ready to drop a hammer blow of up to 45 additional criminal charges on former President Donald Trump in the classified documents case.
The Supreme Court is expected to deliver its opinion in a case where “a commercial business … could refuse to serve a customer based on race, sex, religion, or sexual orientation.”
By a vote of 6-3, the justices ruled that the Biden administration overstepped its authority last year when it announced that it would cancel up to $400 billion in student loans.
State authorities were out in force in Seaside Heights Thursday, scrutinizing price tags, checking out claw machines and measuring the pounds per square inch of basketballs on the boardwalk.
Former producer for Fox News Abby Grossberg has settled with Fox for $12 million after filing two lawsuits with the company alleging that she was subject to bullying and sexism.
A poll of 1,344 managers and business leaders by ResumeBuilder.com found that 74 percent consider Gen Z employees more challenging than older staffers.
A new round of cutting by ESPN includes “a small group of job cuts,” as well as “an ongoing focus on managing costs when we negotiate individual contract renewals in the months ahead.”
President Joe Biden continued criticism of the Supreme Court's decision to strike down colleges' affirmative action programs in an interview on MSNBC’s “Deadline: White House.”
It’s summer. That means lots of fun in the Jersey Shore sun, copious amounts of Manco & Manco pizza, and, of course, incredibly irritating beachgoers who don’t know how to act in public.
Those who know Thomas or have even a passing familiarity with his work see these attacks for what they are: desperate, malicious attempts to discredit and diminish a great man.
Apple is the first publicly traded company to close a trading day with a $3 trillion market value. The company’s shares climbed about 2.31% on Friday to a new high.
Musk and Zuckerberg have teased a potential cage fight and UFC boss Dana White has now been in touch with Italy's Minister of Culture about holding the fight at Rome’s Colosseum.
Nearly 18 months into the Russian invasion of Ukraine now, Putin is coming under increasing strain to finance his increasingly-expensive war and there’s a history lesson for how this will all end.
To promoters, the $1 billion project, funded in part by donations, would unite people of all political stripes and remind them of shared values in an era of national polarization.
The familiar yellow-bordered cover of the monthly National Geographic will no longer be for sale on newsstands starting next year, part of cutbacks affecting the venerable magazine.
Known for
his dry, straight-faced humor and wide range of roles, Arkin was a beloved member of the entertainment world throughout his more than seven decades of acting on screen and on stage.
IRS Whistleblower: Hunter
Biden Hasn’t Paid Taxes on 2014 Money From Ukrainian Oligarch’s Firm
Hunter Biden engaged in a tax evasion scheme, allowing him to avoid paying taxes on millions of dollars in income since 2014. Career prosecutors believed serious felony charges were warranted against him.
Iowa Auditor Says New Law
Will Restrict His Office's Access to Information
Iowa's state auditor, Rob Sand, may face challenges in tracking taxpayer dollars due to a new law that allows state agencies to deny his office access to information and prohibits him from appealing in court.