The British prime minister reportedly said that “past mistakes” should not be an “excuse for indifference or inaction” in the fight against ISIS.
A grand jury decided not to indict the two officers involved in the shooting of John Crawford, 22, inside a Walmart store in Ohio in August.
Obama, speaking at the UN, asked the world to join together to fight the militants and vowed to keep up military pressure against them.
Federal officials conducting a civil rights investigation into the Ferguson police met with residents to hear their concerns about the police.
The secretary of state says the U.S. would pledge $40 million for Syria's opposition groups, part of which will be to boost their ability to govern.
The expansion of the designated terrorist list could mean more targets for airstrikes in Syria.
The U.S. military said it was targeting 12 of the Islamic State group's "modular" refineries, which generate around $2 million a day.
Wealthy nations committed to give $20 billion for climate projects in developing countries, but ensuring how that money is spent is not simple.
White House officials want to clarify legal justifications for the airstrikes in Iraq and Syria, but definitive answers are hard to come by.
State and federal police insist Stingray technology is essential to fight terrorism, but privacy questions persist.
In a blistering FCC filing, Comcast accused its many opponents of extortion, a charge critics called “absurd.”
The second wave of airstrikes on ISIS militants in Syria targeted their oil revenues.
The newspaper also promoted four senior editors to the newly created position of deputy executive editor.
Mohsin al-Fadhli, thought to be the leader of the terror group, had a notable career in al Qaeda before turning up in Syria.
The federal agency is $100 billion in debt, but its package business is growing.
Two universities have introduced a new computer program to help American farmers get the most out of national farm subsidy programs.
The Netherlands will participate in the U.S.-led military operation against ISIS in Iraq -- but not in Syria.
The cost to the U.S. military of bombing ISIS may reach as high as $10 billion.
The last of the celebrated and scandalous Mitford sisters is gone.
The shoes were being used to take photos up women's and girls' skirts.
The resolution requires states to combat terrorism domestically and prevent their citizens from leaving to fight for foreign terrorist groups.
The settlement is the largest ever with one tribe. Under the agreement, the Navajo Nation will dismiss its lawsuit against the government.
The iPhone 6 is made in China, but it isn't sold there. So Chinese immigrants stand in long lines Stateside to feed a mysterious parallel market.
The Syrian Minister of National Reconciliation said the airstrikes are going in the "right direction" because the U.S. notified Syria.
Muhsin Al-Fadhli was one of the few al Qaeda operatives with prior knowledge of 9/11. He was only 20 years old at the time.
Faisal was found guilty on in 2003 of inciting Muslims to kill non-believers, Americans, Hindus and Jews. He said ISIS should free Alan Henning.
A proposed rule would require permits to film in forests, but press advocates say the government is barking up the wrong tree.
Jund al-Khilafah's beheading video of Hervé Gourdel closely resembled beheadings carried out by ISIS.
"Who do you think President Obama could appoint at this very day, given the boundaries that we have?" Ginsburg said.
"We just don't have a confirmation to make at this point," said Pentagon spokesman Colonel Steve Warren. "We don't have personnel on the ground to verify, so we're continuing to assess."