A lawsuit brought by a New Mexico district attorney could serve as a blueprint for how government officials deal with illegal militia groups.
Author: Will Carless, USA TODAY
Defendants in Charlottesville civil trial blame police for violence at 2017 ‘Unite the Right’ rally
Opening statements were made in a lawsuit over the white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017, where Heather Heyer was murdered.
‘Deluge’ in a drought: Millions of Californians warned of flash flooding risk on Sunday
Drought-stricken regions of Northern California could see “excessive rainfall” when an extreme weather system hits the West Coast this weekend.
Lawsuit over Charlottesville ‘Unite the Right’ rally has crippled white supremacist groups, leaders
A lawsuit against the organizers of the 2017 white supremacist rally in Charlottesville has already damaged defendants before trial.
How podcasts have become the backbone for white supremacist recruiting
The intimate nature of podcasting is ideal for spreading hate speech, according to research by the Southern Law Poverty Center.
Capitol Police officers sue Trump, extremists, alleging conspiracy, terrorism on Jan. 6
Seven Capitol Police officers allege Trump and extremists conspired to use violence to stop the certification of the presidential election.
Armed protests are picking up, and a new study says they’re more likely to turn violent
As armed protests pick up, a study shows they’re six times more likely to become violent than ones where there are no firearms.
QAnon followers distance themselves from the movement’s most bizarre conspiracy theories as they rebrand
Since Trump’s defeat and the Jan. 6 insurrection, the QAnon movement is trying to revise its history and has embraced other conspiracy theories.
Department of Homeland Security is now watching social media for terrorist narratives
The Department of Homeland Security will watch social media posts to track narratives that could lead to unrest, violence and hate crimes
13 investigations, no court-martials: Here’s how the US Navy and Marine Corps quietly discharged white supremacists
The U.S. Navy and Marine Corps have quietly kicked out white supremacists, offering them administrative discharges that leave no public record.