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How The Proposed 'Conrad's Law' Came To Be
The proposed legislation criminalizes coercing someone into suicide. -
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Burglars Lift $2 Million Worth Of Body-Shaping 'Faja' Undergarments
In 2018, burglars looted 34,000 pairs of fajas from a Miami undergarment seller. The criminals cut a hole through the roof and disabled the alarms in a movie-style heist. -
Man Accused Of Hacking Bulgaria's Tax Agency Is Released And Given Lesser Charges
A Bulgarian cybersecurity expert was arrested by police after being accused of involvement in the hack of millions of records from the nation's tax agency. -
President Trump Offers To Guarantee Bail For Rapper Jailed In Sweden
Speaking with Sweden's Prime Minister on Saturday, the president “offered to personally vouch for” the bail of A$AP Rocky, who's been in jail in the country after a fight. -
We Shall Overcome: The Highlander Center's History Of Organizing Ordinary Citizens For Social Justice
Over its nearly 90-year history, the Highlander Research and Education Center has trained a cadre of community organizers and activists including Martin Luther King, Pete Seeger and Rosa Parks. In March of this year, white supremacists set fire to the historic school's main offices. -
Thousands Freed From Prison Custody As DOJ Implements Sentencing Reform Law
More than 3,100 are moving out of the Bureau of Prisons system on Friday and the Justice Department is making other changes to comply with a law passed by Congress last year. -
Japanese Anime Studio Hit With Suspected Arson, Killing At Least 33 People
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the apparently deliberate act in Kyoto is "too appalling for words." -
Drug In A Rug: Is That A Bag Of Cocaine Under Your Toupee?
A Colombian man trying to sneak more than a pound of the drug into Spain was caught with the package (poorly) hidden under his fake hair, a police official told NPR. -
Hallmarks Of Innocence: The Prosecution
Logistical, political and psychological pressures on prosecutors can sometimes lead to wrongful convictions.