Oklahoma double murder: new questions raised over women's killing
Emily Morgan and Totinika Elix were found dead on tribal land in 2016. A new report accuses law enforcement of failing to give it high prioirty.
How the unregulated sperm market is creating an online baby boom
Single women and LGBTQ+ couples are increasingly pursuing pregnancy via known donors. Here's a window into how the world of unregulated sperm donations work.
'Killers of the Flower Moon' murders never stopped for Native Americans
The century-old tale in Killers of the Flower Moon is drawing attention to a modern crisis of murders and disappearances among Native people
The revolution in the hunt for America's missing
New technology, law enforcement approaches and civilian investigators are revolutionizing the search for missing persons yet the challenge remains enormous.
'Not treated as humans': Critics say Arkansas neglects inmates' health
From mental health to physical well-being, states are required to care for those in their custody. Activists and some officials say Arkansas fails horribly.
Who killed Marshall Ray Price? Family's desperate search for truth
Marshall Ray Price died of blunt force trauma. Arkansas investigators blame a jail boxing match. The family questions the official version of events.
How a brutal jail death exposes Arkansas' 'punishing' justice system
Marshall Ray Price was beaten inside a county jail in northeast Arkansas. A year later, no one has been charged in his death.
Calls grow to ban sanctioned Chinese firms from federal savings plan
Newsweek investigation adds to growing demands that the U.S. federal retirement system exclude the option for investment in sanctioned Chinese companies
Chinese firms threatening US can get investment from federal employees
At least 115 mutual funds available through the government's retirement plan for federal employees contain shares in sanctioned Chinese companies.
Jails health provider sued after inmates left dead and disabled
Turn Key Health Clinics, criticized for its staffing levels, has been sued at least 160 times since 2015.
Echoing Arkansas death, lawsuit alleges inmate starved to death in Indiana
Arrested for pulling a nurse's hair during a psychotic fit, the suit alleges Joshua McLemore received no medical care and dropped 45 pounds in three weeks.
Man starved to death in Arkansas jail despite 11 years federal of oversight
The Department of Justice is eyeing the death of Larry Eugene Price, Jr., a mentally ill man who spent a year in jail because he couldn't pay $100 in bail.
Senator seeks oversight of moving scams following Newsweek investigation
Sen. Richard Blumenthal said the Department of Transportation must do more, but did not address whether he would introduce legislation to deal with the problem.
Feds accused of issuing 'licenses to steal' as moving company scams rise
Complaints about moving companies to the Department of Transportation have more than doubled since 2015, with Florida leading the nation.
Travel Nurses Suing Agencies Say Their Pay was Slashed in 'Bait and Switch'
Nurses across the U.S. report having their pay cut up to 70% after they relocate for work. Now some are trying to fight back via class actions.
One Year Later: Abandoned Afghan Allies Ponder America's Broken Promises
'They all feel betrayed. How can you not feel betrayed? To leave that country the way we did? That wasn't a withdrawal. It was a retreat.'
Biden Rescue of Afghan Interpreter in 'Media Stunt' Left Hundreds Stranded
'We tried to question why they were just taking Aman and his family. No one replied.'