A professional portrait photographer’s pictures of Uvalde children paint a poignant picture of the victims in the nation’s latest shooting tragedy
Author: Trevor Hughes, USA TODAY
A body in a barrel, ghost towns, a crashed B-29: What other secrets are buried in Lake Mead?
As water levels drop in Lake Mead, a long history is being uncovered, from ghost towns to human remains and Native American ruins.
Abortion clinics are secured like fortresses. Advocates fear Roe ruling could spur new attacks.
Abortion clinics are reassessing security measures amid warnings from law enforcement that they may be targeted amid the pending Roe v. Wade ruling.
What happens if Roe v. Wade is overturned? What we know about Supreme Court’s leaked draft
Abortion-rights activists say this is a moment they’ve been warning about. Here’s what the possible Supreme Court abortion decision may mean.
Transnistria is just a sliver of land between Moldova and Ukraine. But it’s becoming a focus of war.
Tucked between Moldova and Ukraine lies Transnistria, a legacy of the Russian withdrawal during WWII and a thorn in the side of Europe.
Aboard one of the last masked flights: Here’s how crew, passengers found out masks weren’t required
At one airport, news of a blocked masked mandate for travelers raises questions for crew and passengers.
‘We believe in the Ukrainian army’: Historic flood of refugees slows as some decide to stay put
The historic flood of Ukrainian refugees has slowed even as the war against Russia rages.
‘Our people are being killed.’ Ukrainians flee to tiny, poor Moldova as Russia escalates attacks
The tiny country of Moldova is being squeezed between Russia and Ukraine, helping hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing Vladimir Putin’s invasion.
Republican county clerk indicted by Colorado grand jury over election tampering
Tina Peters has repeated baseless election conspiracy theories and is running for Colorado secretary of state.
‘We have to fight too hard’: For civil rights leaders, Arbery verdict is a victory. But is it a fleeting one?
Civil rights leaders predict inequities and systemic racism within the criminal-justice system will remain the norm – even after the Arbery verdicts.