Recent Articles from Associated Press
Assisted-living facility owner, inspector sue over bad sprinklers
The owner of a Massachusetts assisted-living facility that was the site of a fatal fire and an inspection company have sued each other over who is at fault for failure to address a faulty sprinkler system.
Justice Department again fails to re-indict New York Attorney General Letitia James, AP source says
A Virginia grand jury again refused to re-indict Letitia James, dealing another setback to the Trump administration’s push to revive mortgage fraud charges.
Senators seek to change bill that allows military to operate just like before the DC plane crash
Senators urge defense bill changes to prevent helicopter safety rollback after a D.C. crash killed 67, citing NTSB and family concerns.
ICEBlock app maker sues Trump administration
The maker of an iPhone app that flagged sightings of U.S. immigration agents has sued the Trump administration for free speech violations.
Justice Department can unseal records from Epstein’s 2019 sex trafficking case, judge says
A judge ruled Epstein’s 2019 grand jury transcripts can be released under new law, with victim privacy protections in place.
Judge orders Trump to end California National Guard troop deployment in Los Angeles
A federal judge halted Trump’s deployment of the California National Guard in Los Angeles, ruling the administration unlawfully used troops.
Old Bay part of contraband dropped into SC prison
South Carolina prison officials seized a drone that dropped steak, crab legs, and Old Bay into a correctional facility.
Luigi Mangione’s notes to self: ‘Pluck eyebrows,’ ‘Keep momentum, FBI slower overnight’
A to-do list and travel plans found during Luigi Mangione’s arrest shed new light on the steps he may have taken to avoid capture.
Fed likely to lower borrowing costs this week, but follow-up rate cuts face longer odds
The Fed faces a contentious meeting that will test Chair Jerome Powell's ability to corral support for a third straight interest rate cut.
Supreme Court questions limits on political party spending in federal elections, hearing GOP appeal
Conservative Supreme Court justices appeared to back a Republican-led drive that would erase limits on how much political parties can spend.
Job openings barely budged in October, coming in just below 7.7M
U.S. job openings barely budged in October, coming in at 7.7 million with ongoing uncertainty over the direction of the American economy.
Supreme Court declines to hear Texas book ban appeal in case watched by free speech groups
The Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal on a Texas free speech case that allowed local officials to remove books from public libraries.


















