When it comes to civil or criminal justice, the U.S., among high-income nations, is not in the most enviable spot.
Authorities are concerned about Caitlyn's whereabouts because her parents were in the middle of a custody battle and her mother was found murdered.
A new study may bolster the long-denied claims of U.S. veterans exposed to the deadly chemical well after the Vietnam War ended.
The U.S. Navy said the deployment is part of a "routine" exercise.
The discount, which NASA is supposed to give only to government contractors, saved Google execs $3.3-$5.3 million over 5 years.
A Shenzhen company is cranking out pig clones on an industrial scale, and wants to sequence the DNA of a million people.
Drones will not be used to deliver pizza, but current regulations are lacking as to how they can be used.
Neighbors said Pia Farrenkopf kept to herself. They assumed she moved away.
An estimated 500,000 Sri Lankans – about three-fifths of whom are women -- work in the kingdom.
Syrians injured in the country's civil war and Israeli medical workers have managed to get past old hostilities.
International Women’s Day, which celebrates global gender equality, will take place on March 8.
The man the U.S. government would really like to get its hands on will answer questions from the public on Monday.
A Dutch journalist and a Belgian photographer set out across war-torn Syria with a plan to interview Assad. Here's what happened.
A clean-up of the U.S. Navy’s intranet, which has 800,000 users at 2,500 locations, reportedly took four months and cost $10 million.
The OGS fund reintroduced defense spending that would otherwise be cut, and its growth has exploded since 2013.
Tanks, planes, and ships: here is what North Korea's armed forces are working with.
The bill in favor of the "upskirting" ban will now go to Governor Deval Patrick who has reportedly committed to signing it.
There are more than 5,000 Indian nationals, including 4,000 students, living in different parts of Ukraine.
The students who celebrated Pakistan's victory over India in the Asia Cup game last Sunday were charged with treason.
During their phone conversation, the U.S president and Japan's prime minister agreed Russia's presence in Ukraine is threatening world peace.
Paul Ryan's possibly plagiarized story at the CPAC conference Thursday claimed poor children shouldn't get government-funded lunches.
The Venezuelan president rejects an offer from the American States Organization to mediate in the current upheaval, and even lashes back.
Most scientists aren't happy with the president's plan to keep research funding mostly frozen.
The tycoon went for fear-mongering, even though experts from all sides have found no evidence that immigrants are stealing jobs from Americans.
The conservative conference has toned down some of its more outrageous panels this year, but there are still a handful of odd talks.
India currently provides her neighbor with 500 MW of electricity.
The NRA leader says the media "hates" his organization, but gun owners will never "submit nor surrender."
Despite thawing relations with Beijing, Taiwan is concerned the mainland is capable of attacking successfully.
Qatar has long annoyed its fellow GCC members, particularly Saudi Arabia.
Italy's new government has been in office two weeks and already it faces a crisis: How not to antagonize the provider of much of Italy's energy?