The U.S. Supreme Court will decide whether an Atlanta family mistakenly raided by the FBI can pursue a lawsuit against the lead FBI agent and the federal government.
The Supreme Court will hear arguments on a case that will affect whether the FBI can be held accountable for accidentally raiding the wrong property.
Trina Martin, her then-partner Toi Cliatt and her son Gabe Watson allege they were startled awake just before 5 a.m. on Oct. 18, 2017, when a six-agent SWAT team busted down their front door ...
WILLMAR — The Minnesota Moose scored four times in the second period to rally past the Willmar WarHawks 7-4 on Friday night.
HARRISON FLATS — Playing just three days after their head coach, Tom Tucker, underwent quadruple bypass surgery, the Kootenai ...
It was Houston Academy’s first regional tournament win since advancing to the state semifinals in 2022. The Raiders (18-4) ...
The Bills should be motivated to trade two late first-round picks (and more stuff, if required) to add a premier pass rusher ...
Just offshore of the towering national monuments of Washington, a tall crane now hovers over the Potomac River. It casts a ...
Wednesday is National Signing Day and we’re letting you know where Charlotte-area high school athletes are heading for ...
On the Lakers front, they'll receive Martin from Charlotte and Robert Williams III from Portland. They'll send Rui Hachimura, ...