Donald Trump still has the gall to say he supports police, even after pardoning those who assaulted officers on Jan. 6, 2021.
Chicago's police union leader, John Catanzara, has been a vocal supporter of President Trump, but he's mum on the president's ...
The police reform consent decree, still pending in court in Louisville, stems from an investigation started after the police killing of Breonna Taylor ...
President Donald Trump’s mass pardons and commutations for Jan. 6 seditionists, terrorists, obstructionists, and hundreds of other felons dealt a stark blow against the rule of law. The executive ...
As Maryland's Department of Juvenile Services (DJS) Secretary Vincent Schiraldi approaches his two-year mark in office, he faces mounting scrut ...
Butler County has ratified new contracts with three unions that include roughly $1 million in pay hikes in the first year that county leaders say reflect efforts to attract and retain talent in a ...
Tishaura Jones warns lawmakers that a takeover would undermine city’s progress on crime. But Gov. Mike Kehoe and Republican ...
Not one member of Indiana's Republican congressional delegation, all of whom swore to protect the U.S. Constitution, ...
Fear of increased ICE raids have already negatively affected the nation’s agricultural sector, causing alarm that food prices ...
Trump’s pardon came after Sutton and Zabavsky were unanimously found guilty by a federal grand jury in 2022 of conspiracy to obstruct and obstruction of justice over the incident, as well as ...
Trump commuted the sentence of local Volusia County Proud Boys leader Joe Biggs, who was serving 17 years for his role in Capitol riot.
When a party’s leader claims to “back the blue” but pardons or frees those who assaulted police, some party members may feel dissonance. How do they reduce that dissonance?