Prosecutors and Defense Lawyers Begin to Seat Jurors for Trump Trial
The prospective jurors questioned on Tuesday mirrored their city: diverse, opinionated and with strong views about the former president.
The prospective jurors questioned on Tuesday mirrored their city: diverse, opinionated and with strong views about the former president.
Carine Roitfeld teamed up with Berluti to sprinkle some fashion fairy dust on the designs. Here’s the verdict.
Senator Mark Warner, the chairman of the Intelligence Committee, said the United States was more susceptible to Russian influence operations than it was during the 2020 elections.
The laborious process of selecting the people who will decide Donald J. Trump’s fate hinges on whether they can judge him impartially.
And what would that mean for the climate?
Uri Berliner, a senior business editor at NPR, said the public radio network’s liberal bias had tainted its coverage of important stories.
The International Monetary Fund offered an upbeat economic outlook but said that new trade barriers and escalating wars could worsen inflation.
The justices’ questions considered the gravity of the assault and whether prosecutors have been stretching the law to reach members of the mob responsible for the attack.
Federal regulation capping toxic airborne silica has been decades in the making. The delay has cost miners dearly.
Ruth Patir, Israel’s representative at the event, says she won’t open her show in the national pavilion until Israel and Hamas reach “a cease-fire and hostage release agreement.”
Both the federal and the Arizona Supreme Courts have conjured a past that rejects the right to bodily autonomy.
At rallies, he does alt-universe loops in which he suggests that if the election hadn’t been taken from him, nothing bad would have befallen the world.
Hundreds of thousands of people are homeless. This filmmaker wants you to see them.
After a Boeing engineer went public with safety concerns, the company invited reporters to its South Carolina factory and top engineers vouched for the plane.
Major Republican donors have begun to open their checkbooks for Donald Trump now that he is the presumptive nominee, as he struggles to keep pace with President Biden.
China’s big bet on manufacturing helped to counteract its housing slowdown in the first three months of the year, but other countries are worried about a flood of Chinese goods.
The Israeli war cabinet met again on Monday to discuss the strike, with some hawkish members of the prime minister’s government calling for a swift and forceful retaliation.
Protesters railed outside, media and security swarmed the area, and inside the courtroom, Donald J. Trump appeared to nod off.
Jury selection began in the Manhattan criminal case, but many who might weigh Donald J. Trump’s fate told a judge that they could not be impartial.
The Idaho attorney general had asked the justices to move swiftly to let the state law, which would ban gender-affirming medical care for minors, go into effect.
After a video was widely shared online of two men pushing over a rock formation at Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Nevada, the authorities are asking for the public’s help to identify them.
The spending plan, which still needs to be approved by the full State Legislature, includes measures on criminal justice, education and illegal cannabis shops.
The New York Philharmonic said the musicians would not perform for now, after a magazine article brought new attention to allegations of misconduct. They have denied wrongdoing.
Also, Israel weighs retaliation against Iran. Here’s the latest at the end of Monday.
Trump has tried to project strength and confidence around his New York trial, but it might not be easy.