A number of U.S. government web pages changed or went dark Friday as agencies scrambled to comply with President Donald Trump's executive orders.
While some advocates praise the commutations as a step toward ending capital punishment, others are outraged.
‘It’s a women’s rights issue.’ a senior legal adviser for Independent Women’s Law Center says.
Public data and entire webpages went blank Friday as federal agencies scrambled to comply with a directive tied to President Donald Trump's order rolling back protections for transgender people.
A nearly $1 million grant will be awarded to the Montana Department of Labor and Industry to support workforce reentry for ...
President Donald Trump has targeted transgender and nonbinary people with a series of executive orders since he returned to ...
A 65-year-old Hemet man was sentenced Friday to 15 years and eight months in federal prison for collecting thousands of images and videos of child pornography and manipulating a 12-year-old girl into ...
An information technology expert for decades assumed the identity of another man so convincingly that his victim was forcibly ...
The Office of Personnel Management directed agency heads to strip “gender ideology” from websites, contracts and emails in a ...
Schenectady man James Alvin Boone pleaded guilty to weapons and drug charges in United States district court on Thursday and could be facing life in prison after he and a ...
All State Department employees were ordered to remove gender-specific pronouns from their email signatures. The directive, from the acting head of the Bureau of Management, said this was required to ...
A federal judge sentences a Wisconsin man to 12 years for stealing a California man’s identity for 35 years. He must also pay a $10,000 fine and restitution to the victim.