SUV driver kills 71-year-old mother crossing street with daughter during NYPD chase An SUV driver fleeing from police slammed into a 71-year-old woman, killing her, as she was crossing a street with her daughter in Brooklyn on Thursday night, according to witnesses and police sources ... 05/9/2024 - 2:35 pm | View Link
Man sentenced in fatal 2023 hit-and-run AUSTIN (KXAN) — A man was sentenced on two charges April 30 in connection with a fatal crash that occurred in March 2023. According to Travis County court documents, 26-year-old Milton ... 05/9/2024 - 7:01 am | View Link
2 killed in violent T-Bone crash that sent car flying 150 feet into ditch, police say Houston police said a truck slammed into the victims' car as they tried to make a left turn at a stop sign. The T-bone crash sent both vehicles flying into a ditch. 05/9/2024 - 1:08 am | View Link
Alleged human smuggler charged after high speed chase ends in fatal crash The Texas Department of Public Safety is investigating a deadly human smuggling crash.Three people are dead after an alleged human smug ... 05/8/2024 - 4:03 pm | View Link
Health News A Texas man is petitioning a court for information over his former partner's alleged out-of-state abortion, setting up a first-of-its-kind legal test to the limits of statewide abortion bans ... 05/8/2024 - 1:00 pm | View Link
A Colorado abortion fund said Thursday it’s helped hundreds access abortion in the first months of 2024, many arriving from Texas where abortion is restricted, showing a steady increase in need each year since Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022.
The U. S. Supreme Court’s decision left a patchwork of state bans, restrictions and protections across the country.
Coloradans can expect two years of free college for qualifying students, long-term property tax reform after years of Band-Aid measures, and denser development following a legislative session that Democratic leaders called a “breakthrough” for many of their long-held policy goals.
A year removed from the bitter divisions and policy losses that marked the 2023 General Assembly, Gov.
Denver’s revamped migrant program in recent days began enrolling the roughly 800 people who are expected to be the first beneficiaries of a new approach city leaders consider innovative.
Participants will receive six months of housing, help with living costs, job training and legal support as the city files asylum claims on their behalf in an effort to get them qualified for work permits.
Those are the “haves” among the city’s migrant community, the people who qualify for the narrower, more intensive — and less expensive — scope of the city’s new strategy, announced by Mayor Mike Johnston last month.
But there will be many more “have-nots” under the city’s retooled migrant response.
Harry Dunn’s body was bruised and his Capitol Police uniform soaked with sweat and pepper spray when he got home on Jan. 6, 2021. He’d spent the day grappling with Donald Trump supporters charging into the Capitol to stop the certification of Joe Biden’s win, absorbing body blows and racist jeers directed at him.