Rapist faces justice
Digest more
The Supreme Court rules 9–0 in a case led by Justice Jackson, shaping how patent law applies to generic drug “skinny labels.”
It was the department’s clearest statement to date that it was pulling back from a plan to use taxpayer money to make payments to people who claimed to have been politically persecuted.
The Justice Department has outlined plans to start the consolidation of three key grant components in September, as part of a reorganization effort that has raised concern from advocates and drawn the attention of at least one senator.
The federal courts have long assumed that the government’s lawyers are trustworthy. Now judges across the country are criticizing their lack of candor.
The U.S. Department of Justice tells CBS News it will speed up review of certain whistleblower complaints dealing with fraud against benefits programs like Medicare.
W.Va., and his family fight to save their Greenbrier business empire from the threat of a court-appointed takeover, a newly published list of delinquent real estate properties shows unpaid taxes have mounted across the family’s resort business portfolio.
Former President Joe Biden is suing to block the House Judiciary Committee from obtaining, and potentially releasing, audio recordings and transcripts of conversations in 2016 and 2017 with the ghostwriter of his memoir.
The latest effort to interrogate diversity initiatives comes after a 2025 U.S. Department of Education investigation.
The Justice Department says it will abide by a federal judge's ruling pausing the government's creation of a $1.8 billion "anti-weaponization" fund that has drawn bipartisan pushback in Congress.