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Federal Officials Indict More Than 40 People Linked to White Supremacist Prison Gang
The Ghost Face Gangsters started in California but a Georgia offshoot has spread criminal activity far beyond prison walls. On Monday, 43 were charged with drug trafficking and firearms possession. -
Swastika Defaces Duke University Mural Honoring Synagogue Shooting Victims
The Nazi symbol was spray-painted over a Star of David on a campus memorial to the 11 people killed last month at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pennsylvania. -
Six Years After Museum Heist, Missing Picasso Possibly Found In Romania
Thieves entered Rotterdam's Kunsthal in 2012 and made off with seven paintings, allegedly later burned in an oven by the ringleader's mother. Now the story has taken another strange turn. -
Police In Many U.S. Cities Fail To Track Murdered, Missing Indigenous Women
Seattle-based researchers examined the disappearances and murders of Native American women in 71 U.S. cities. They found information on 506 documented cases — and huge, troubling gaps in the data. -
Man Suspected Of Mailing Pipe Bombs Is Indicted And Faces Life In Prison
A 30-count indictment was handed up in Manhattan federal court on Friday for Cesar Sayoc, the Florida man who is accused of sending pipe bombs by mail to prominent Trump critics. -
First Massachusetts 'Compassionate Release' Prisoner Goes Home
Alexander Phillips, suffering from terminal cancer, was released after serving 13 years of a manslaughter sentence. -
Judge Orders Pipe Bomb Suspect Cesar Sayoc Held Without Bail
Prosecutors said Sayoc posed "a serious risk of danger to the public" and described him as "a flight risk." His lawyer made no objection to the decision. Sayoc could face up to 48 years in jail. -
Notorious Drug Lord 'El Chapo' Heads To Trial In New York
Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, the man accused of having run the world's largest drug trafficking organization, was charged in a 17-count indictment that spans decades. Jury selection began Monday. -
Record-Setting Sale Of An Ancient Assyrian Stone Relief Sparks Looting Fears In Iraq
The 3,000-year-old relief fetched more than $28 million at Christie's, more than any other similar work. But some archaeologists worry the high price could trigger looting of other ancient artifacts. -
Another 'Civil War?' Pessimism About Political Violence Deepens In A Divided Nation
Following a rash of deaths, threats and violent acts, Americans fear the nation may be growing so far apart that danger may become a regular factor in partisan disputes. It has happened before.