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A Chicago family is getting a $2.5 million settlement from the city after their home was mistakenly raided by Chicago police in 2017. Family members said they've been suffering ever since.
Back at the closed location in South City, St. Louis Police told us their officers are awaiting lab results on what they seized before looking into the next steps.
Chicago police officers pointed guns in the face of Peter Mendez, then 9 years old, after raiding the wrong home. On Friday, Peter, now 17, spoke out for the first time about his family's $2.5 million ...
The Glass House immigration raid on July 10 was one of the biggest since the president's inauguration. Here's how it went down at a Camarillo farm.
Rutherford County Sheriff's Office says two people were arrested after a raid led to the seizure of over 6,684 individual ...
The Wildlife Crime Control Unit stated that selling and caging birds and other wild animals is a punishable offense under the Bangladesh Wildlife (Conservation and Security) Act, 2012.
Kentucky police officer convicted of using excessive force during the deadly Breonna Taylor raid should serve no prison time.
The administration asked the judge in the case to sentence the former officer to essentially the brief time he had served ...
Anaheim Contigo, a city response to federal immigration raids, may receive $250,000 from an unrelated $15-million donation ...
Want 50GBps of sequential performance? HighPoint's 7604A x16 PCIe 5.0 NVMe RAID card sporting four full-speed M.2 slots can ...
Meanwhile, family and friends of those trapped inside rushed to the perimeter, which was manned by California National Guard ...
A Hispanic American Chicago family who said their 5- and 9-year-old children were traumatized by guns pointed at them during a bungled 2017 no-knock ...