Court TV - Pool - File / AP Derek Chauvin, 3 Other Ex-Officers All Federally Indicted in Death of George Floyd The Justice Department has won indictments against four police officers in connection with George Floyd's death. By Jack Davis May 7, 2021
Evan Vucci / APCommentary Lubbock, TX, Becomes Largest City in US to Outlaw Abortion Residents voted 62 percent to 37 percent in favor of a measure to establish abortion as an act of murder 'at all stages of pregnancy.' By Isa Ryan May 3, 2021
Susan Walsh - Pool - AFP / Getty ImagesCommentary Pelosi Says Maxine Waters Shouldn't Apologize for Comments Many Have Called Incitement of Violence The Democrats' double standards are on display as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi covers for Rep. Maxine Waters. By Ameer Benno April 21, 2021
Jim Mone / AP Photo Former Vice President Walter Mondale Dies at 93 The death of the former senator, ambassador and Minnesota attorney general was announced in a statement from his family. By The Associated Press April 19, 2021
Court TV - Pool / APCommentary CNN Legal Analyst Implies That Derek Chauvin Has to Prove Innocence to Be Acquitted Derek Chauvin has the same rights to due process as the rest of us, and his attorney was simply doing his job. By Isa Ryan April 19, 2021
Michael M. Santiago / Getty ImagesCommentary Busted: Dem Sen. Raphael Warnock Caught Endorsing Blatant Lies About Georgia's Voting Law This is just the latest example of Democratic elected officials painting a very misleading picture of election reform laws. By Isa Ryan April 14, 2021
Brendan McDermid - Pool / Getty Images 'Dystopian' Vaccine Passport Programs Meet Pushback as States Give Green Light Supporters and dissidents of the idea are clashing over its potential consequences for privacy and civil liberties. By Brett Kershaw April 2, 2021
Charles Krupa / APSpecial Report Lawyer: Here's How Affirmative Action Is Vulnerable to Fraud Speaking with The Western Journal, legal expert Cory Liu explained how affirmative action policies are vulnerable to fraud. By Michael Austin April 1, 2021
Willy Sanjuan - Invision / APOp-Ed Larry Elder: My Final Case Against Reparations for Slavery 'Even during slavery, a black child was more likely to live under a roof with his or her biological mother and biological father than today.' By Larry Elder March 10, 2021
Kerem Yucel - AFP / Getty ImagesCommentary Opinion: The Days of Egregious Qualified Immunity Abuses May Soon Be Over Since its adoption in 1967, qualified immunity has tipped the scales to favor government defendants in court. By Brett Kershaw March 10, 2021