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What does Kilmar Abrego Garcia's case tell us about the relationship between the Trump administration and the courts? NPR's A Martinez asks Kate Shaw, law professor at the University of Pennsylvania.
After Russia's devastating strike on the northeastern Ukrainian city of Sumy {SOO-mee} that killed at least 35 people, a 13-year-old boy trapped inside a burning bus faced a dilemma.
Albums that are 2 or 3 years old are somehow shooting up on the charts. But why?
Hong Kong is caught in the middle of the trade disputes between the U.S. and China despite being a free port. The former ...
The Trump administration is ending temporary protection status for Afghan citizens living in the U.S. NPR's A Martinez speaks to Shawn VanDiver, president and CEO of the nonprofit AfghanEvac.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is taking the witness stand for the third straight day, testifying in a federal antitrust trial that could threaten his business empire. Hear the latest from the trial.
The court is scheduled to rule whether a transgender person with a certificate that recognizes them as female can be regarded ...
Following a lithium-ion battery fire at the Moss Landing plant in Monterey County in California, communities nationwide are expressing concerns about hosting similar plants.
Photos, hours of footage and other documents were made public Tuesday after a recent court order that mandated any depictions ...
NPR's A Martinez speaks with Fox News contributor Steve Hilton about his new book "Califailure: Reversing the Ruin of America's Worst-Run State." ...
For NPR's College Podcast Challenge, one college student shares her complicated relationship with her Catholic faith, and shares advice for other people asking the same big questions in life.
Four new executive orders aimed at reviving coal mines include plans to keep coal fired power plants open even if companies operating them want to close.