LAW

Apr 13 2026POLITICS

Nursing Home Laws Clash With Faith and Facts

The Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne, a 125‑year‑old Catholic order that runs a free nursing home for dying cancer patients, filed a lawsuit in April 2026. They argue that New York’s new law forces long‑term care facilities to assign rooms, use pronouns and allow restroom access based on a person’s ge

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Apr 13 2026POLITICS

Oil Companies Push for Legal Shield From Climate Lawsuits

Oil firms have long known that burning their fuels can harm the planet. Yet they hid proof and misled people for decades, blocking clean energy progress. Scientists and activists sued these companies to recover money for damages caused by climate disasters that were worsened by the fuels. The

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Apr 13 2026POLITICS

Killearn’s 1982 vote and the surprising power of a few ballots

In 1982, a quiet neighborhood near Tallahassee made a clear choice. Residents in Killearn Estates voted against joining the city by a noticeable margin. Their own neighborhoods rejected the idea, with small precincts showing more "no" votes than "yes. " Yet somehow, the final result still counted as

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Apr 13 2026BUSINESS

Membership Mix-Up: Costco in Hot Water Over Renewal Rules

A California man has taken Costco to court, claiming the store failed to follow state rules about membership renewals. Russel George says he never got the required warning before his $65 Gold Star membership automatically renewed. California law says customers must get a heads-up 15 to 45 days befor

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Apr 12 2026POLITICS

Virginia Governor Faces Legal Threat Over Gun Bills

The Department of Justice has warned Virginia’s governor that it will sue if she signs new gun‑control laws. A letter from the Civil Rights Division says any bill that limits law‑abiding citizens’ right to own firearms could trigger a lawsuit. The letter cites an executive order from the Trump

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Apr 12 2026POLITICS

California Mental‑Health Program Faces Big Change

The state’s mental‑health diversion plan, created in 2018 to keep people with serious illnesses out of jail, is under fire from prosecutors who say it lets dangerous offenders slip through the cracks. A high‑profile case that fuels this debate involved a man who was allowed to live in an LA shelt

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Apr 12 2026POLITICS

Lawmakers push for smarter tools to calm dangerous car chases

Many drivers in California know the sudden rush of panic when sirens blare behind them. High-speed chases often end in crashes that hurt more than just suspects. A lawmaker from the area thinks the state’s officers need better options than speed and adrenaline to handle these moments. Her proposal w

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Apr 11 2026CRIME

Man Arrested After $5 Million Pandemic Loan Scam

A man from West Bloomfield, Michigan, was taken into custody on Friday after authorities say he stole more than five million dollars from the government by filing fake applications for pandemic aid. The suspect, Randon “Romero” Williams, 40, faces charges of wire fraud and money laundering. He al

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Apr 11 2026POLITICS

Crossing Tragedy: One Charged, Four Lost

A 27‑year‑old Sudanese man has been formally accused of putting lives at risk after a boat he supposedly steered off the coast of Calais sank, killing four people trying to reach Britain. The National Crime Agency says the charges come under a fresh immigration law that lets Britain prosecute those

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Apr 11 2026BUSINESS

Weather guy vs. station: the messy fight over side gigs and broken rules

When a local TV weatherman got let go in January, he called it a total surprise. The station says nope—not even close. Their court papers tell a different story, packing warnings, suspensions, and a long list of conduct issues that built up over months before the final pink slip. Between late arriva

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