Messenger: Pine Lawn vows to stop hiding public records. Will Jennings be next? In these north St. Louis County cities, aldermen had to file lawsuits to get the public documents they need. That's not how good government works. 04/24/2024 - 12:00 am | View Link
Romance scammers turn victims into "money mules," creating a legal minefield for investigators Scammers have been increasingly successful in leveraging their romantic grip on victims by turning them into unwitting co-conspirators, or "money mules." ... 04/23/2024 - 1:14 am | View Link
Judge awards $23 million to ex-St. Louis cop beaten by police during 2017 protests A St. Louis judge has awarded more than $23 million to Luther Hall, a Black former undercover St. Louis police officer who was beaten by police during protests of the Jason Stockley verdict in 2017. 04/21/2024 - 12:00 am | View Link
Scammers unknowingly call sheriff’s employee in Missouri: They’re ‘relentless,’ deputies say Scammers have been calling residents of Clay County pretending to be sheriff's office employees, and then asking for money to pay for phony bonds, or to keep fake warrants from being issued. 04/20/2024 - 6:53 am | View Link
Can Missouri attorney general stop Kansas City mayor from welcoming migrant workers? Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey this week accused Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas of offering an “open invitation for illegal aliens to come to Missouri.” The Republican attorney general ... 04/19/2024 - 11:11 am | View Link
Donald Trump is currently a criminal defendant in a New York state trial. But on Thursday, his lawyers will argue before the Supreme Court that as a former President he’s largely immune from criminal prosecution, setting the stage for one of the most pivotal decisions on presidential power in a generation.
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The case, Trump v.
Jaelyn was 19 weeks and five days into a much-wanted pregnancy when the cramping began—slowly at first, then in an insistent rhythm that signaled she was in labor. Several excruciating hours later, emergency doctors delivered a heart-wrenching diagnosis. The amniotic sac was protruding from her cervix; her baby was doomed.
Eli. Underwood likes the experience of voting in person, but they now have to vote by mail. Underwood went to a Detroit church to cast a ballot in the 2022 general elections, but chronic health conditions meant the two flights of stairs to the basement taxed them badly; living with Long Covid as well, Underwood was frustrated by the unventilated space and unmasked poll workers.
This story was originally published by Inside Climate News and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.
When Wyoming governor Mark Gordon told the Environmental Protection Agency in 2023 that the state would not be applying for federal grant money to reduce pollution and greenhouse gases, he left most communities in the state without access to potentially transformative funds to upgrade infrastructure, reduce pollution, and bring down costs for local governments.
But in the nation’s most sparsely populated state, two cities and the Northern Arapaho and Eastern Shoshone tribes could qualify on their own for Climate Pollution Reduction Grants (CPRG) from the $4.6 billion made available to states, cities, tribes and territories under the Inflation Reduction Act to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution.
Sketch artist Elizabeth Williams, who was in the courtroom for Donald Trump's hush money criminal trial, joins CNN's Erin Burnett to talk about how Trump's attention may have changed in Day 6 of the trial.