The president could find himself struggling to stay in office if his taxes records, lawsuits and conflicts of interests continue to draw more scrutiny.
In an interview with Fox News' Bill O'Reilly, the president suggested that former U.S. presidents were not "innocent."
A number of companies are offering free or discounted frozen yogurt on Monday.
Qassim al-Rimi was speaking about a US raid in Yemen that killed 25 civilians, including 11 women and children, and also a U.S. Navy SEAL commando.
Over the last few months, there have been several cases of abduction in California, including that of Sherri Papini in November 2016.
The famed author of “Little House On The Prairie” book series, was born Feb. 7, 1867 outside of Pepin, Wisconsin.
“The Karl Marx of the Alt Right,” Richard Spencer hailed the New England Patriots’ win against Atlanta Falcons with a series of racially charged tweets.
"They consider him to be a cheater, a liar, a symbol of all that’s bad in professional football... In other words, people really, really, really, really, really, really, really hate Tom Brady."
“You’ve got to stick with your friends,” President Donald Trump said.
The New York Times published a revealing portrayal of Trump's first days as president Sunday night that did not cast the new administration in a flattering light.
Budweiser got political with the ad, "Born the Hard Way," which tells the story of founder Adolphus Busch and the prejudice he faced as an immigrant in the United States.
As we await Gaga's highly-anticipated performance, here are five best Super Bowl halftime shows of all time.
Some saw the ad as an attack on Trump's immigration policies, but the company said it wasn't.
Trump's orders allow police officers to deport people convicted of crimes or believed to have committed "acts that constitute a chargeable criminal offense."
Cameron Gamble, who’s been training the U.S. Military Special Ops community on survival tactics since shortly after Sept. 11, 2001, said his Project Taken could help other families facing similar tragedies.
The Vermont senator warned that the president will sell out the middle class and working Americans by cutting Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, and gutting financial regulations.
Americans will drink an estimated 32.5 million gallons of beer while watching the New England Patriots face off against the Atlanta Falcons in Houston Sunday. Want to join them?
George Zimmerman, the man who shot Martin, deemed him to be "possibly dangerous" because of his race and the fact that he had the hood of his sweatshirt pulled up over his head.
Chanel Lewis was arrested Saturday at his Brooklyn home in the death of Karina Vetrano, 30, who was raped and strangled as she ran through Spring Creek Park in Howard Beach in the Queens borough of New York City in August.
President Trump is facing his first possible defeat in office over his executive order barring travel from seven Muslim-majority countries. The order was struck down Friday. The 9th Circuit has ordered briefs for Monday.
The vice president said Iran needs to realize there's a new president who won't put up with violations of the nuclear deal negotiated by the previous administration.
President Donald Trump is preparing to deport legal immigrants if they rely on social services funded by taxpayers.
With more than three miles of security perimeters around the venue, heightened security is part of the game plan for Houston authorities, NFL officials and FBI specialists for Super Bowl Sunday.
The Air Force's Thunderbirds will fly over Houston's NRG Stadium before the Super Bowl on Sunday.
A simple blood test could soon shift how concussions are detected and treated. It could even one day prevent CTE.
A Facebook post recounting the efforts of passengers in a subway train who erased Nazi Swastika symbols in Manhattan, New York, has gone viral, and was even shared by the former first daughter Chelsea Clinton.
Saturday marks Ronald Reagan Day, a holiday created by the Ronald Reagan Legacy Project to preserve the former president's work and views.
Robart, a federal judge in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington, was appointed to the bench by the then-president George W. Bush in 2004.
This is the first arrest made in six months in the killing of the 30-year-old woman, who police said was sexually assaulted and strangled.
"What do you think? Our country's so innocent?" Trump asked the Fox News host when the latter calls the Russian president a "killer."