Net Neutrality

The Justice Department dropped its legal challenge of California’s net neutrality law in the Eastern District Court of California on Monday. This move could represent a shift back to the Obama-era policy of equal access to the internet. The FCC’s interim leader Jessica Rosenworcel said, “When the FCC, over my... Read More »

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis

Fani Willis, the District Attorney of Georgia’s Fulton County, has opened a criminal investigation into allegations of election fraud in the state. Willis has shared a letter with state officials that explains the investigation will probe into the details of attempts made to influence the 2020 Georgia elections. Although the... Read More »

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks to reporters during a news conference at a COVID-19 pop-up vaccination site.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo became the national face of specific information when COVID-19 hit, offering daily briefings that were fluid as the pandemic data kept shifting. As the deaths of nursing home patients across the US and in New York quickly became the most prominent fatality statistic, Cuomo’s administration... Read More »

Trevor Till

On October 21, 2020, Trevor Till – class president, drum major, lead in the Seneca Illinois High School production of The Music Man, and a gifted pole vaulter, committed suicide, for reasons his mother, Lisa Mara Moore, termed “COVID isolation.” Cut off from school for the last months of his... Read More »

Workers construct wall in the desert between Sundland Park, N.M., and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, last month. Herika Martinez/AFP via Getty Images

Request to Delay On Wednesday, February 3, 2021, the Supreme Court postponed oral arguments and legal filings in cases regarding an asylum policy and Trump’s border wall at the request of Biden’s Justice Department. The asylum case was to be heard on March 1 and the wall case on February... Read More »

Publix Store

On April 28, 2020, 70-year-old Gerardo Gutierrez died of complications caused by COVID-19. According to court documents, in late March, Gutierrez worked side-by-side at the Publix deli counter with another employee who exhibited symptoms of the virus. The two employees were not wearing masks, which Publix banned its employees from... Read More »

In this Sunday, June 7, 2020, file photo, a hundred faithful sit while minding social distancing, listening to Los Angeles Archbishop Jose H. Gomez celebrate Mass at Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, the first Mass held in English at the site since the re-opening of churches, in downtown Los Angeles.  (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)

The latest church v. state battle to come before the U.S. Supreme Court has resulted in a draw. No, California can’t totally shut down places of worship in an effort to protect its citizens from a pandemic. Yes, churches may stay open, but only if proper health and safety precautions... Read More »

Sen. Butch Miller, R-Gainesville.

Republican lawmakers in Georgia are looking to change how votes are cast in the state by introducing a collection of bills that would essentially roll back voter access. The GOP insists that the voter access rollbacks are an effort to combat voter fraud, a widely held belief by conservatives both... Read More »

Employees sued Whole Foods for sending workers home for wearing BLM masks.

Employees of a Whole Foods grocery store in Cambridge, Massachusetts, who filed a class-action lawsuit against the company have been hit with a blow as a federal judge has dismissed nearly every claim made in the lawsuit against the grocery store chain. The conflict surrounding Whole Foods started soon after... Read More »

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., goes back to her office after speaking on the floor of the House Chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Feb. 4, 2021. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) was removed from her committee assignments in response to her past involvement in conspiracy theories and rhetoric condoning violence on social media. On Friday, February 5, she said that her removal would stifle her constituents, and then said that serving on committees controlled by Democrats was... Read More »

SolarWinds headquarters in Austin, Texas.

SolarWinds, a network-management software maker, has had one of the worst hacker breaches in U.S. history. The attack was sophisticated, broad in scope, and marred the trust placed in tech providers. SolarWinds’ new chief executive is still trying to determine how his company became the hacker’s main avenue of attack.... Read More »

An Amazon Prime delivery van is being unloaded on the streets in downtown Portland, Oregon.

Amazon has settled with the Federal Trade Commission, agreeing to pay back $61.7 million after an investigation uncovered that Amazon was withholding tips from its Flex drivers. Flex drivers are not direct employees of the Amazon Flex Program; rather they are independent contractors who often depend on the tips for... Read More »

People look at a house where five people were found dead after a fire in Denver.

Three teens have been identified as the arsonists behind a house fire that killed five family members on August 5, 2020. Two of the teenagers have been identified as 16-year-olds, Kevin Bui and Gavin Seymour. Both are being charged as adults. The third suspect, who is 15 years old, has... Read More »

logo for the Robinhood app on a smartphone in New York. The online trading platform Robinhood is moving to restrict trading in GameStop and other stocks that have soared recently due to rabid buying by smaller investors. (AP Photo/Patrick Sison)

Last week, volatility in the stock market involving securities such as GameStop and AMC made national headlines. Soon after, popular investment app Robinhood found itself under public scrutiny because of the role it played in the controversial GameStop scandal. The market volatility has caught the attention of lawmakers so much... Read More »

Del. Stacey Plaskett, D-V.I., asks a question during a House Oversight and Reform Committee hearing on Aug. 24. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call file photo)

When the second impeachment of former President Donald Trump was officially announced, a determined House delegate from the Virgin Islands threw her proverbial hat in the ring and won a place in history. Stacey E. Plaskett is a congresswoman and is the first person to be a manager of any... Read More »