Firm that led GOP review of Arizona's 2020 election closes
The company was found in contempt of court on Thursday, after refusing to release records related to the election audit.
The company was found in contempt of court on Thursday, after refusing to release records related to the election audit.
A new Department of Labor report reveals the U.S. added 199,000 jobs in December. The unemployment rate has fallen to 3.9%. This comes as the country confronts a surge in COVID-19 infections and rising inflation. Frances Stacy, director of portfolio strategy at Optimal Capital, joins CBSN to discuss the current and future labor market.
The recall includes some 28,356 pounds of raw ground beef.
When he won the Best Actor Oscar in 1964, he was not only the first Black actor to do so, he remained the only one until 2002.
A Georgia auto repair shop broke the law when it dumped $915 in change on a former employee's driveway, regulator alleges.
"CBS Morning" lead national correspondent, David Begnaud, spent nearly a week interviewing the key people surrounding Louisiana's first posthumous pardon, descendants of the landmark Homer vs. Plessy segregation case. In 1896, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against Homer A. Plessy for sitting in a train car for "whites only." He died a convicted felon in 1925. This week, Governor John Bel Edwards pardoned him posthumously.
Ahmaud Arbery's family attorney, Lee Merritt, claims Travis and Greg McMichael asked the family of Ahmaud Arbery for a plea deal for their federal hate crime charges. Merritt and Arbery's mother, Wanda Cooper Jones, join "CBS Mornings" to explain why they turned them down and what they hope for during today's sentencing.
Kazakhstan's president is ordering law enforcement to fire without warning and aim to kill as he cracks down on protests that have swept the country this week. CBS News reporter Mary Ilyushina joins CBSN AM from Moscow with the latest.
Legendary actor Sidney Poitier has died at the age of 94. The Oscar-winner's celebrated career, which included films like "In the Heat of the Night" and "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner," helped open doors for countless others in Hollywood. "Entertainment Tonight" co-host Kevin Frazier joins CBSN with more on Poitier's legacy.
North and South Korea are still technically at war, seventy years after the Korean war officially ended. A two-and-a-half-mile wide buffer zone, the DMZ separates the two countries. It's a no-go area for humans, which has made it a rare haven for wildlife. Elizabeth Palmer visits the DMZ with South Korean biologist Seung Kim to scout for animals and hear how lasting peace – while good for people – is a looming threat to nature
The CDC's isolation guidelines continue to draw criticism and confusion. The agency's director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, joins “CBS Mornings” to explain the reasons behind the updated recommendations.
Officials admitted to the expired tests the same day the state changed its COVID testing guidance.
The U.S. Supreme Court is hearing challenges to two of the Biden administration's COVID-19 vaccine policies. One measure requires large private companies to verify vaccination or weekly testing for employees who don't get the shots. The other measure requires vaccination for workers at federal health care facilities. CBS News reporter Melissa Quinn joined CBSN with more.
The State of the Union address is later this year than it has been in the past.
A look at the career of the Oscar-winning actor-director, one of Hollywood's legendary trailblazers.
"This Court will not commemorate the one-year anniversary of this attack on the Capitol by granting defendant's request for non-essential foreign travel when he is awaiting judgment for his actions on that day," the judge said.
Two Haitian journalists were burned alive by a gang as the country endures an ongoing security crisis six months after the assassination of its president. In the North Atlantic, a Russian submarine collided with a U.K. warship's sonar while on patrol. CBS News reporter and producer Haley Ott joins CBSN AM from London with those stories and other international news.
Heavy snow expected in the mid-Atlantic and Northeast; Who killed Jonelle Matthews?
Nearly 130 years later, Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards granted a posthumous pardon to Homer Plessy.
The U.S. attorney's office in Boston argued Dzhokhar Tsarnaev has not used his funds to pay victims, but has sent money to his siblings.
Sony, Panasonic, HTC and other consumer electronics companies are releasing new VR and metaverse products at CES.
Postal workers were able to work out who the letter was meant for from facts about the recipient written on the envelope.
Travis McMichael, his father Gregory McMichael and William "Roddie" Bryan were convicted in state murder charges in November.
Two Haitian journalists were burned alive by a gang as the country endures an ongoing security crisis six months after the assassination of its president. In the North Atlantic, a Russian submarine collided with a U.K. warship's sonar while on patrol. CBS News reporter and producer Haley Ott joins "CBSN AM" from London with those stories and other international news.
Abducted in 1989, Li Jingwei was able to find his mother decades later after a meticulous drawing of his village helped police locate his family.