Federal Judge James Orenstein denied the Department of Justice’s request to order Apple to unlock a convict’s iPhone.
The NASA astronaut landed in Kazakhstan late Monday night after a 340-day mission in space.
The debt-ridden island’s crumbling public health infrastructure is just one reason.
Economic activity expanded in some districts but fell or remained flat in others, the Fed said in its latest report.
Donald Trump has been offending people for years, not just since he announced his run for president last June.
The controversial businessman’s rise to the front of the GOP pack has both angered and disturbed international media.
The 15-member council sanctions aim to prevent Pyongyang from obtaining resources for its nuclear weapons program.
The race for air superiority has heated up since Moscow began a $700 billion, 10-year modernization program to gain parity with the U.S.
"The people of Flint deserve more than to be a backdrop to a debate," the coalition said.
Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt deals with two provisions of HB-2, a Texas law that limits access to abortion.
Diego Dzodan was detained by Brazilian authorities Tuesday after his employer did not comply with a court order to hand over WhatsApp data.
The Malaysian airline went missing two years ago, and few traces have yet turned up.
Despite struggles in energy and manufacturing, the private sector added 214,000 jobs in February.
The country has been ravaged by years of war, but a high-level UN official has said foreign interference will only exacerbate a humanitarian crisis.
A new Department of Defense competition will invite vetted hackers to find vulnerabilities in U.S. cybersecurity.
Referees in world soccer could soon get video help when they make an obviously incorrect call.
Alaska had 28 Republican delegates up for grabs, and the New York billionaire had been leading in the polls.
A renewed drop in crude oil prices weighed more than expected on inflation within the eurozone in February.
The Defense Department hopes a new program will help seal government computer networks.
The American sporting goods retailer has been in debt since a $1.3 billion buyout in 2006 turned the company private.
Most European stocks tracked robust gains in Asian markets while U.S. stock futures traded in the red.
The six-member bloc cited hostile acts conducted by Hezbollah and stated that the group tried to recruit residents from its countries for terror attacks.