New revelations include that the suspect, Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, researched how to carry out a mass shooting by keeping notes on his phone for months beforehand.
Lynley Price
YouTube creators will soon have to disclose use of AI in videos or risk suspension
The platform is also deploying the same technology to root out content that breaks its rules.
Biden says his goal for Xi meeting is to get U.S.-China communications back to ‘normal’
The president will use the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum to show the U.S. has the initiative and money to focus on the region despite grappling with a number of foreign and domestic crises.
Letting people work from home is good for companies’ revenue growth
The success could be due to companies’ ability to hire quicker and from a wider geographic area.
Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear reelected in Kentucky, overcoming Republican dominance
His opponent, Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron, was a protege of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.
Ohio’s Issue 1 passes, protecting abortion rights in the Republican state
It’s the seventh state to protect access since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last year.
Ten days before another government shutdown, Congress expands to-do list with Ukraine, border
The budget-shutdown loop continues because the House and Senate have failed to pass the dozen individual bills needed to fund various agencies, resulting in constant stopgap measures.
Special counsel in Hunter Biden case insists he was ‘decision-maker’ in rare testimony
U.S. Attorney David Weiss told lawmakers he’s required to follow Justice Department guidelines and federal law, but those conditions don’t interfere with his decision-making authority.
Treasury’s Yellen calls Republican effort to cut IRS funding ‘damaging and irresponsible’
House Republicans argue it would save taxpayer money, but independent budget analysts say it would actually cost taxpayers billions from uncollected tax revenues.
Supreme Court likely to preserve gun law that protects domestic violence victims
Justices sounded persuaded by arguments from the Biden administration’s top Supreme Court lawyer that the prohibition aligns with the longstanding practice of disarming dangerous people.