Stewart Rhodes, the Oath Keepers founder and convicted seditionist whom Donald Trump recently freed, has been barred from visiting Washington, D.C.
President Trump’s flurry of pardons this week sent a message to law enforcement: He will “back the blue” if they back him.
This week, Missouri U.S. Senator Josh Hawley defended the president’s decision, saying it’s within the president’s right. The Republican said the president kept his promise.
IN THE NEWS: Many Republicans in Congress, as well as Vice President JD Vance, insisted there would be no wholesale pardons ...
Readers discuss Jan. 6 pardons, past violence at the Capitol and other acts of clemency. Regarding the Jan. 21 front-page ...
Schneider's official website contains a section with instructions on how to submit parking tickets for reimbursement.
NEWS CENTER Maine's Donovan Lynch speaks with analysts Democrat Genius Black and Republican Ray Richardson about this week's ...
Officers Terence Sutton and Andrew Zabavsky were convicted for their roles in a deadly 2020 police chase that killed Karon ...
A January 6 defendant's criminal case remains open despite President Donald Trump's executive order pardoning offenders.
A judge barred the Oath Keepers founder from Washington, D.C., without court approval after Trump commuted his prison ...
Speaking on the Stay Tuned With Preet Bharara podcast, which she cohosts, former federal prosecutor, Joyce Vance, said on ...
Condemning such assaults on law enforcement officers should be the easiest thing for a politician. But too many Republicans ...