A Colorado web designer who didn’t want to create wedding websites for same-sex couples has lost her appeal of the state’s anti-discrimination law.
New Evidence Points to Old Motive in 1985 Church Murders
For 36 years, the murder of a Baptist deacon and his wife in the vestibule of their small white church off a two-lane highway in southern Georgia has been attributed to robbery, drugs, or revenge.
Three Jehovah’s Witnesses sentenced to six or more years in Russian prison for their faith
Three Jehovah’s Witnesses in Russia were convicted and sentenced to prison for practicing their faith on Thursday (July 29). Vilen Avanesov, 68, was sentenced to six years, and his son Arsen Avanesov, 37, along with a third defendant, Aleksandr Parkov,…
Theodore McCarrick: Defrocked US cardinal charged with assault and battery
Theodore McCarrick, who was defrocked by Pope Francis after an abuse inquiry in 2019, now faces indecent assault and battery charges in Massachusetts.
In 2010, the US apologized to Native Americans. A new spiritual movement aims to recognize it.
Negiel Bigpond’s family was forced from their land and marched across the country on the Trail of Tears.
O’Rourke, protesters begin nearly 30-mile Texas voting march
As Rebecca Flores set out on a nearly 30-mile voting rights march to the Texas Capitol on Wednesday, she recalled another long distance: the drive her parents made from the outskirts of town in the 1950s to cast their ballot,…
Swastika is found carved into an elevator at the State Department
A swastika was found carved into an elevator at the State Department on Monday, leading Secretary of State Antony Blinken to condemn the hateful carving and describe it as a reminder that anti-Semitism is still alive.
Analysis: U.S. Supreme Court’s ‘shadow docket’ favored religion and Trump
As midnight approached on the eve of the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday, the conservative-majority Supreme Court granted emergency requests by Christian and Jewish groups challenging COVID-19 crowd restrictions imposed by New York state.
Judge orders forfeiture of ancient tablet from Museum of the Bible
A federal judge has ordered Hobby Lobby, the arts and crafts chain whose president is Museum of the Bible founder Steve Green, to forfeit an ancient tablet bearing a rare fragment of the Epic of Gilgamesh.