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The president wants to ratify the replacement for NAFTA before taking up a $2 trillion infrastructure bill that Republicans say is too much
Michael Avenatti, 48, was arrested in March after federal prosecutors said he threatened to expose that Nike improperly paid high school basketball players unless the company paid him up to $25 million
A Chinese woman charged with lying to illegally enter President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago told a judge she wants to fire her attorneys and represent herself
Journalists, advocates remain alarmed at the apparently violation of California’s shield law
Allowing health care workers to avoid certain procedures could jeopardize some people’s care
Protesters say Marie Benesova could compromise investigation of prime minister
Federal Railroad Administration announced last week it would deny California money awarded by Congress, arguing the project has not made enough progress
A senior Palestinian official likened the US plan to have Arab states bankroll incentives to get Palestinians to buy into its Mideast plan to 'financial blackmail'
Papers include a 1910 postcard and documents kept by Max Brod, which experts say open a window into Europe's 20th century literary and cultural scene
Zelenskiy, whose decree sets parliamentary elections for July 21, is gambling that his popularity will help get some of his supporters into parliament
American man and two local co-workers accused of violating drug laws concerning marijuana, with potential penalties ranging from five years' imprisonment to death
Carpio-Morales, who had who accused President Xi of crimes against humanity, claims she was held for hours then sent back to Manila
Chopra is a goodwill ambassador for the United Nations children's agency
State-run Iraqi media is quoting Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi as saying that Baghdad will send delegations to the U.S. and Iran to help end tensions between the two countries
The documents show the agencies spied on the populace at large, sought to eliminate dissidents through detention, intimidation or killings and systematically persecuted the Kurdish minority
British Prime Minister has secured backing from her Cabinet for tweaks that she hopes can finally get Parliament's approval for her thrice-rejected Brexit deal
For the first time since dictator Gen. Francisco Franco's death in 1975, 24 far-right lawmakers have also taken seats in the lower house
Niki Lauda won the F1 drivers' championship in 1975 and 1977 with Ferrari and again in 1984 with McLaren
The new report includes 432 case studies involving torture and maps trends and patterns, targets, perpetrators, locations and other details
But advocates say Nepal's estimated 350,000 Sherpa remain marginalized, with many living in remote, impoverished villages
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