Tina Peters, the former Mesa County elections clerk convicted of breaching her county's Dominion Voting Systems server after the 2020 election, is scheduled to be released from a Colorado prison Monday after serving less than a quarter of a nine-year sentence, the Associated Press reports.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz ordered the Israel Defense Forces on Monday to strike Hezbollah terrorist targets in the Dahiyeh district of Beirut, sending thousands of civilians fleeing the Lebanese capital a day after Israeli troops seized a strategic medieval fortress in the country's south.
The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), a health entity, has vowed to contribute about $60 million to fast-track the development of vaccine candidates against the Bundibugyo ebolavirus.
U.S. Central Command intercepted two Iranian ballistic missiles targeting American forces in Kuwait late Sunday, the military announced Monday, the latest exchange of fire between U.S. and Iranian forces stretching across the weekend.
The head of U.S. Southern Command sat down with a senior Cuban general at the edge of Guantanamo Bay on Friday, a direct military encounter so unusual it signals just how tense relations have become between Washington and the communist regime in Havana.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth declared Saturday that the United States will not allow China to seize control of the Asia-Pacific and pressed American allies to raise defense budgets to 3.5 percent of GDP or stop expecting Washington to carry their weight.
The U.S. Department of Justice filed a motion Friday asking a federal judge to recuse herself from a Georgia election records case, arguing that her prior ties to Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis make impartial proceedings impossible.
President Donald Trump announced Sunday that Tom Barrack, the U.S. Ambassador to Turkey, will take on expanded duties as Special Presidential Envoy to both Syria and Iraq, placing a single diplomat at the center of three overlapping pressure points in the Middle East.
President Donald Trump called on a federal judge Sunday to immediately throw out a lawsuit blocking construction of a rooftop drone base at the White House, warning the judge would be personally "held responsible" for any future attack on the executive mansion if he refuses.
When Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth addressed the cadets at West Point, many Americans heard something that has been missing from too much of modern public life: moral clarity.
On Tuesday, Vice President JD Vance confirmed from the White House briefing room that the Department of Justice is actively investigating Rep. Ilhan Omar for immigration fraud. "I don't want to prejudge an investigation," Vance told reporters. "It certainly seems like something fishy is there." He made one thing unmistakably clear: "If we think there's a crime, we're going to prosecute that crime."
On Tuesday, the Justice Department added a one-page addendum to Trump's IRS settlement declaring the agency "forever barred and precluded" from auditing Trump, his family, and his businesses' past tax returns. Chuck Schumer called it a "get-out-of-jail-free card." Democrats across the country screamed corruption. The media ran wall-to-wall coverage about accountability and the rule of law.
The First Amendment protects the free exercise of religion. It protects the right to assemble. It does not require Christians to hide their faith to make progressives comfortable. There is no constitutional clause that says "except when the president is involved" or "only in private." The left has spent decades demanding that Christianity retreat from public life entirely, not because the Constitution requires it, but because the left is threatened by it.
A former Cuban military pilot accused of helping shoot down two unarmed humanitarian planes and kill four Americans in 1996 was sentenced Friday to seven months in federal prison, a term he has already nearly served in pretrial detention.
Nearly every musician announced for the Great American State Fair, a 16-day patriotic celebration planned for the National Mall in Washington, D.C., has withdrawn from the event after learning it was organized in part by President Trump's nonprofit, Freedom 250.
The Trump administration unleashed its "aliens" website, believed to be related to recently released UFO files, but instead details the presence of illegal immigrants in the United States.
An investigation into staff at the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) has expanded to at least 1,500 individuals with suspected terror links.
The Justice Department is looking into whether the Washington Nationals broke federal civil rights law, after a secretly recorded video surfaced of a team executive openly acknowledging he keeps a devout Catholic pitcher off the club's social media because of the player's religious views.
A Russian attack drone crashed into the roof of a residential apartment building in Galati, Romania on Friday, injuring at least two people in what Romanian authorities called an unprecedented strike inside NATO territory.
President Trump declared on Truth Social that he was heading to the Situation Room to make a "final determination" on Iran as the countries continue their negotiations to end the conflict.
A federal judge has temporarily blocked the Department of Justice (DOJ) from using its "anti-weaponization" fund to pay those targeted by the government.