All USA Update
- Does 'In God We Trust' belong on a police car?
Activists want 'In God We Trust' bumper stickers removed from state vehicles, but can the motto of the United States be banned?
- Supporters donate to Planned Parenthood in honor of ... Jeb Bush?
Pledges have been made in the name of several Republican politicians amid growing pressure to defund the women's healthcare provider.
- If George W. Bush can't get out of jury duty, you probably can't either
While most people try to avoid jury duty, Judge Eric Moyce said ex-president George W. Bush was 'good natured' at the Dallas courthouse on Wednesday.
- Psychological firm that screened Baltimore police is under investigation
Documents obtained by The Associated Press reveal the firm hired to conduct psychological evaluations of officers cut corners in their mental health screenings.
- Hiroshima at 70: Why attitudes are changing about the first atomic bomb
Seventy years after the bombing of Hiroshima, public opinion is shifting against justifying the event.
- Can Chris Christie’s education policies fly on the national stage?
Gov. Chris Christie, a GOP presidential hopeful, sounded off recently about the American Federation of Teachers, but his education policy ideas haven’t always gotten a warm reception, either.
- Eleanor Roosevelt tops poll for new $10 bill: What's her appeal?
A new poll shows more than one in four Americans are hoping the new $10 bill will feature Mrs. Roosevelt.
- When a man shoots his neighbor's drone, whose rights are violated?
The government and civil rights groups try to find their way through confusing territory when one citizen attacks the drone of another.
- Why Ohio may start drug testing welfare recipients
The debate on drug screening the poor has rippled through Ohio before. But lawmakers say this new proposal seeks to be more protective than punitive.
- Netflix pioneers a year of parental leave: Will others follow?
Netflix makes the case that a generous leave policy will attract and keep better workers. But some caution that too much choice for employees may end up being confusing, producing 'choice paralysis.'
- National Night Out 2015: How block parties brought neighbors and police officers together
Communities across the country hosted block parties, festivals, parades, and cookouts on Tuesday evening to celebrate the 32nd annual event.
- Activists outraged at Forest Service's plan to round up Arizona wild horses
The federal agency has given owners a Friday deadline to claim horses roaming around Tonto National Forest.
- Can Obama's Clean Power Plan survive in court?
The Obama administration's Clean Power Plan fired up legal and political opposition before it was even announced.
- How do corrupt police officers get away with crimes?
An Alabama police officer reportedly wanted to murder a local resident and make it look like a case of self-defense. The murder didn't happen, but the officer wasn't charged.
- Drone drops drugs into Ohio prison yard: The newest smuggling method?
The use of drones for smuggling contraband into prisons is growing increasingly common as drones become more accessible to the public.
- Week-long manhunt underway in California following attacks
Over 100 law enforcement officials have been engaged in a week-long hunt for an unidentified gunman in central California.
- A sinkhole grows ... in Brooklyn?
A leak in a water main may have caused roads at a Brooklyn, N.Y. intersection to collapse Tuesday, a fire department official said.
- Giraffe killing produces more outrage. But can legal hunting help?
An Idaho accountant has come under fire for photos she posted online of a giraffe and other wildlife from a legal guided hunt in South Africa. But some experts say that such legal expeditions could actually be beneficial for wildlife conservation.
- Police officer handcuffs children with learning disabilities. Who is at fault?
Two children diagnosed with learning disabilities were handcuffed at a Kentucky school. The ACLU wants to know why the children were put under the control of a sheriff's deputy.
- Federal agents called to Baltimore to quell rising violence
Over 40 people were killed in Baltimore in July, making it the city’s deadliest month in decades.