Trump, national monuments and DOJ
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18hon MSN
Trump administration seeks dismissal of Abrego Garcia deportation case after his return to U.S., while lawyers plan sanctions over handling of his transfer from El Salvador.
The U.S. Justice Department this week fired two more employees who worked on investigations into President Donald Trump's retention of classified records and efforts to overturn the 2020 election, according to three people familiar with the matter.
Wednesday's hearing is another attempt by the president's legal team to have a hush money case moved from New York state court to federal court, in an effort to get the criminal charges dismissed.
President Donald Trump's attorneys were slated to confront a federal appeals court over his New York conviction, arguing the hush money case should have been tried federally.
18hon MSN
Stephen Breyer's brother Charles Breyer will preside over the lawsuit Newsom brought against the Trump administration in California.
U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer, a former Watergate prosecutor, will decide whether Trump had the legal authority to federalize 4,000 California National Guard troops.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday the military would rename bases which were changed after racial justice protests in 2023, including reverting to Fort Lee originally named after Civil War-era Confederate commander Robert E.
The massive military parade planned in Washington, D.C., this weekend could send the national mood from tense to combustible, as President Donald Trump doubled down on threats to protesters.
Judge Dugan's case rests on a "factually unsupported and inaccurate storyline" that ICE agents tried to "commandeer" a state courtroom, and a "manufactured version of judicial immunity," the DOJ says.
WASHINGTON—The Justice Department will resume investigating foreign-bribery cases with a narrowed focus on matters that relate to U.S. strategic interests, including buttressing the ability of American firms to compete for business overseas.