Musharraf could face the death penalty if convicted.
Supporters of Adrienne Martin allegedly disrupted Brownie's memorial service and phoned in threats to Stray Rescue in St. Louis.
The Republican senator said he was told as a youth that he could choose Canadian or American citizenship, so he went for the U.S.
The five-year crunch may have ended, but consumers still aren't able to get loans. So where is the Fed's quantitative easing going?
Bhutto was killed in December 2007, shortly after she returned to Pakistan on amnesty granted by then-President Pervez Musharraf.
On Tuesday, U.S. and Canadian apparel companies are scheduled to meet in Chicago to initiate the implementation of a five-year safety plan.
As a trademark battle over the "Tesla" name in China continues, other foreign brands have found successful translations of their English names.
And now it's Colombia's turn: Another country joins the upheaval in Latin America with a general strike.
The proposed mine, the Dongria Kondh site, would destroy the forests and disrupt the rivers of the area.
A group is laying the groundwork for a "dark tourism" site at Japan's crippled (and radioactive) Fukushima nuclear plant.
Saudi Arabia said it will offer financial aid to Egypt, while the U.S. struggles to achieve middle ground.
Some 1,050 artifacts spanning 3,500 years of history were looted from Egypt's Malawi National Museum last week.
Al Jazeera America is set to launch on American cable networks Tuesday afternoon with more than 14 hours of daily hard news programming.
The state's tech companies are uniting against a new state sales tax on computer software services, claiming it is a threat to jobs.
The hedge fund adviser and his Harbinger Capital Partners admitted wrongdoing in an SEC investigation.
What occurred in 1953 planted the seeds of anti-American hatred in Iran and across the Middle East.
The Tea Party darling was born in Canada, which means he's got Canadian citizenship. That may spell trouble for a presidential run.
A probe will investigate whether summit attendees embezzled money during a June/July summit in Dar es Salaam.
Earl Campbell was allegedly caught on a wiretap blaming "stop and frisk" for his reluctance to transport guns from South Carolina to NYC.
More than 800 Native American babies were adopted in the U.S. in the year ending Sept. 30, 2012. Are they at risk of custody battles?
The neighboring countries cannot decide who gets to keep the coastal province of Guanacaste. Both want it and neither will back down.
A company in China wants to name a "secret" technology after the NSA whistleblower, but would not be the first.
The hacktivist collective hacked a U.K. website in response to the detention of the Guardian journalist's partner at Heathrow.
Is Venezuela homophobic? Just ask the target of the latest verbal attacks, opposition leader Henrique Capriles.
Walter Louis Gafvert III allegedly told cops he's addicting to child porn. Authorities say they found child porn on his phone -- while questioning him about child porn.
The NSA broke its privacy rules thousands of times per year. But two U.S. senators say that's not the half of it.
Obama's approval rating among Americans has tended to decline during summer months -- like some other recent presidents.
Diana met Khan at the Royal Brompton Hospital London in 1995 (one year before her divorce from Prince Charles was finalized).
Monday, Aug. 19, is World Humanitarian Day. The U.N. celebrates the day this year with a new project called the "word market," which raises money for the Global Humanitarian Fund
The former president still faces charges that he was complicit in killing hundreds of protesters by ordering his security forces to do so.