Dallas Police Chief David Brown said the gunman was motivated by “recent police shootings” and seemed lucid during negotiations.
Micah X. Johnson was identified as one of the suspects in a shooting that left five police officers dead.
After a week of tragedies in the U.S., here are four ways to help and learn more.
At NATO’s summit Friday, the alliance is expected to formally agree to the deployment of multinational battalions to Baltic states and Poland to counter Russian aggression.
Two amendments to a financial services spending bill, approved by the House Thursday, target Boeing’s planned sale of over 100 aircraft to Iran Air.
Hyperloop One, a U.S. startup working on commercializing Elon Musk’s trademark concept, has received a lot of funding from Russian investors.
The State Department had halted its probe into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email sever when she was secretary of state, while waiting for the Department of Justice to complete its investigation.
The defense ministries of South Korea and the U.S. announced in a joint statement Friday plans to deploy THAAD in the Korean Peninsula.
The lawsuit claims that the company has prioritized its monetization efforts with no regard for the safety of children.
The company won approval from a U.S. bankruptcy court judge to set in motion its plans to auction Gawker Media after it lost a $140 million lawsuit filed by professional wrestler Hulk Hogan.
The U.S. Labor Department's jobs tally due Friday is likely to show nonfarm payrolls increased by 175,000 jobs last month.
The app is free, but it does offer microtransactions where users can spend real money to get in-game PokéCoins.
It's technically a Gallic rooster, or in French "le coq gaulois," and it's a national symbol of sorts.
New anti-terrorism laws in Russia will force communications operators to store metadata for three years and release it to security services when requested.
In states where medical marijuana is legal, opioid prescriptions and costs have dropped.
The U.S. trial of an alleged Mexican cartel leader could shed light on a dark period of deaths and disappearances in Mexico's drug war.
Months before it actually happened, the June 23 vote in the U.K. to take itself out of the EU was making businesses cautious when approaching mergers and acquisitions.
The move toward a “major breakthrough” comes a day after the U.S. slapped sanctions on Kim Jong Un and other North Korean officials over human rights violations.
According to Fitch’s latest report, credit ratings of 15 countries were downgraded in the first of half of 2016 compared with the record full-year high of 20 in 2011.
The relationship between Russia and NATO continues to deteriorate as both sides try to show their military capabilities in Eastern Europe.
Brazil has by far the largest media market in South America, but power and resources are largely focused in a few small conglomerates.
NATO officials are expected to approve the deployment of four battalions to Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland as they nervously watch Russian President Vladimir Putin’s recent actions.