Last night, an initial majority draft of the Supreme Court's opinion on Roe v. Wade indicated that the court would overturn the landmark decision, a ruling that would eliminate the constitutional right to abortion nationwide.
President Joe Biden and his administration are blocked from making a move regarding the Title 42 expulsion before May 23, according to a Louisiana court.
A federal court in California has restored Endangered Species Act protections for the gray wolf after they were eliminated by the Trump administration in 2020.
Argentine model Maria Belén Rodriguez is currently entangled in a lawsuit against Google and Yahoo, which she claimed linked her name and modeling photos to pornographic websites.
After three day of deliberations, the jurors that convicted Marissa Devault of beating her husband to death with a hammer sentenced the Arizona woman to life in prison, sparing her life from the death penalty.
All eyes are now on Oscar Pistorius, the former Olympian who is on trial for allegedly murdering his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp, in Pretoria on Valentine's Day in 2013.
Former foreign exchange student Amanda Knox and her lawyers are awaiting the verdict in the retrial stemming from the 2007 murder of British student Meredith Kercher.
Just a few days ago, AT&T's new "Sponsored Data" wireless project reminded us that omissions and sloppy policy writing in previous regulations by the Federal Communications Commission can be a threat to Net Neutrality. Now, that point has become blazingly clear, as a U.S. Federal appeals court has struck down the FCC's Net Neutrality-based "Open Internet Rules," possibly clearing the way for a future internet that's completely unrecognizable from the current system.