All Latest News Wires
- Hundreds flee as two California wildfires threaten homes
California firefighters are struggling to get the upper hand on two rapidly-spreading wildfires while contending with temperatures in the triple digits.
- Widow of chokehold victim describes quiet, non-violent man
Member of Eric Garner's family met Friday with federal prosecutors to ask them to bring a civil rights case against the NYPD. Garner died in police custody. An onlooker shot video of him in a chokehold.
- Can Ohio State reverse band culture of sexual harassment?
Ohio State University dismissed marching band director Jonathan Waters Thursday after concluding he knew about, but failed to stop inappropriate rituals. The university will appoint a task force to help bring about changes in the band.
- More young homeless in Denver, drawn by legal marijuana
At homeless shelters in Denver, officials say the rise in young men living on the streets is due to legalized marijuana.
- Police still baffled by Abigail Hernandez's disappearance
Missing for nine months, 15-year-old Abigail Hernandez returned to her New Hampshire home last week, leaving police with questions about why she vanished and who may have helped conceal her.
- Should steroid-era stars be admitted to Baseball Hall of Fame with asterisk?
Tony La Russa told ESPN he believes players like Barry Bonds and Mark McGwire should be included in the Baseball Hall of Fame as the greatest players of their generation despite questions about their use of performance enhancing drugs.
- John McCain calls 2-hour Arizona execution 'torture'
Senator John McCain said Wednesday's execution of Joseph Wood, which took more than 90 minutes and left him gasping for air throughout, was a 'bollocks-upped situation.' McCain supports capital punishment for certain crimes.
- Philly police search for suspects in carjacking that killed three children
Philadelphia police are searching for two men who allegedly carjacked an SUV and hit a fruit stand, killing three siblings ages 7, 10, and 15, and injuring their mother and the carjacking victim.
- Miami-Dade judge rules Fla. ban on same-sex marriage unconstitutional
Agreeing with an earlier ruling by a judge in Monroe County, a Miami-Dade judge ruled Friday Florida's ban on same-sex marriage served only to discriminate against same-sex couples. Both ruling are expected to face appeals.
- Hospital shooting: Man kills one, is shot by his psychiatrist, faces murder charge
Hospital shooting: District Attorney Jack Whelan said Richard Plotts would be arraigned on a murder charge if he survived the night following Thursday's shooting.
- Boehner vs. Obama: House panel moves toward vote on Obama lawsuit
Over Democratic objections, Republicans cleared the way for a House vote on whether to sue President Barack Obama for failing to implement ObamaCare as it was written.
- Sen. Sanders offers lower-cost bill to reform Veterans Affairs
Senate VA Committee chairman Sen. Bernie Sanders said Thursday that a new proposal to improve veterans' access to health care would cost less than $25 billion over three years, $10 billion less than a bill passed by the Senate last month.
- Montana judge censured over lenient rape sentence, rape comments
District Judge G. Todd Baugh, of Billings, appeared before the court in Helena, where Chief Justice Mike McGrath read the prepared censure statement. A censure is a rarely used public declaration by the high court that a judge is guilty of misconduct.
- Arizona execution drags on, inmate gasping throughout
The execution of Joseph Rudolph Wood Wednesday afternoon took almost two hours, with Wood gasping repeatedly and making audible sounds throughout. An emergency legal appeal to the Arizona Supreme Court was unsuccessful.
- Accused of plagiarism, Sen. John Walsh says he suffered from PTSD
Democratic Senator John Walsh said he was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder from his service in Iraq when he failed to attribute conclusions and verbatim passages lifted from other scholars' work in his master's thesis at the US Army War College.
- Teen trying to set record killed in plane crash over Pacific Ocean
Haris Suleman, 17, was attempting to fly around the world in 30 days when his plane crashed in the Pacific Ocean, killing him, and leaving his father Babar Suleman, also on board, missing.
- Supreme Court denies Arizona inmate's final appeal
The Supreme Court cleared the way to carry out the execution of Arizona murderer Joseph Rudolph Wood, who was scheduled to be put to death at the state prison amid new scrutiny nationwide over lethal injections after several controversial executions.
- Obama declares Washington wildfire emergency, firefighters make progress
Washington wildfire: The cooler weather and moisture has helped firefighters in their efforts to combat the state's largest wildfire in history. With more rain in the forecast, crews worry that moisture could lead to flash floods after so much ground vegetation has been burned away.
- Feds crackdown on Mexico border smugglers
In Operation Coyote, federal agents arrested 192 people along the Mexican border in South Texas on immigrant-smuggling charges and seized more than $625,000.
- Why California banned full-contact football practices
A new California law bans full-contact football practices for middle and high school students due to concerns over possible concussions. In Los Angeles, a high school now has mandatory baseline testing for concussions for all students.