Documents sought by the U.S. Justice Department from former President Donald Trump may contain material related to what The New York Times described as some of the most highly classified programs run
A federal judge has reinstated a moratorium on coal leasing from federal lands that was imposed under former President Barack Obama and then scuttled under former President Donald Trump.
Donald Trump's companies ex-CFO Allen Weisselberg, is still facing a variety of criminal charges related to tax evasion allegations after he failed in a New York court this week.
The FBI seized classified material from Donald Trump, and court filings revealed the former president may be under investigation for mishandling government records
Live news updates: The jolt of international sanctions over the war disrupted trade and threw industries like car manufacturing into paralysis while consumer spending seized up
The US Justice Department announced the criminal charges against Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps for allegedly trying to assassinate John R Bolton, who served as NSA to Trump.
The FBI agents were looking for documents relating to nuclear weapons, among others, in the unprecedented search they conducted of the premises of Donald Trump earlier this week in Florida.
Live news updates: The UN Chief has called for an immediate end to all military activity around Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant
Donald Trump and his supporters are ratcheting up their baseless claim that Federal Bureau of Investigation agents may have "planted" evidence when they searched his Mar-a-Lago home
Donald Trump has hired a prominent Atlanta criminal defence attorney known for defending famous rappers to represent him in matters related to the special grand jury
In Connecticut, state that launched the Bush family and its brand of compassionate conservatism, a fiery Senate contender who promoted Trump's election lies upset the state GOP's endorsed candidate
Donald Trump kept his date with New York Attorney General in Manhattan but declined to answer questions from the latters office, a calculated and yet surprising gamble in a high-stakes legal interview
The director of the FBI had strong words Wednesday for supporters of former President Donald Trump who have been using violent rhetoric in the wake of his agency's search of Trump's Mar-a-Lago home. Christopher Wray, who was appointed as the agency's director in 2017 by Trump, called threats circulating online against federal agents and the Justice Department deplorable and dangerous. I'm always concerned about threats to law enforcement, Wray said. Violence against law enforcement is not the answer, no matter who you're upset with. Wray made the remarks following a news conference during a long-planned visit to the agency's field office in Omaha, Nebraska, where he discussed the FBI's focus on cybersecurity. He declined to answer questions about the hours-long search Monday by FBI agents of Trump's Palm Beach, Florida resort. It has been easy to find the threats and a call to arms in those corners of the internet favoured by right-wing extremists since Trump himself announced the
Trump reasserted his grip on Republicans in Wisconsin's primary, but both Democrats and Republicans said that his involvement in key races for governor and US Senate could come back to hurt them
Donald Trump says he invoked the Fifth Amendment and wouldn't answer questions under oath in the long-running New York civil investigation into his business dealings
Outraged Republican allies have demanded an explanation after federal agents conducted an unannounced raid at former US President Donald Trump's Florida home, Mar-a-Lago.
The potential legal peril from multiple quarters comes as Trump lays the groundwork for another presidential run in 2024
Former US President Donald Trump will face questioning from the New York State attorney general's office this week, a new turn into the civil investigation
All of a president's official papers, no matter how trivial, are considered public property, not his alone, according to the Presidential Records Act of 1978
FBI's unprecedented search of Trump's Florida residence ricocheted around government, politics and a polarized country along with questions as to why take such a drastic step now