60 Minutes correspondent Lara Logan's October story on the deadly 2012 attack on a U.S. mission in Libya featured Dylan Davies, a security contractor who reportedly told a different version of events to 60 Minutes than he did to his employer and to the FBI.
Read More »Still A Teenager, Freed Cartel Killer Will Leave Mexico For U.S.
Three years after the startling arrest of a 14-year-old for acting as a gang's assassin in Mexico, the boy, now 17, is reportedly heading to the United States, according to media and government reports. Edgar Jimenez, nicknamed El Ponchis — "The Cloak" — is a U.S. citizen who was born in San Diego.
Read More »Dozens Of Haitian Migrants Reported Dead After Boat Capsizes
U.S. Coast Guard crews scrambled to work with Bahamian forces to rescue more than 100 survivors Tuesday. The Coast Guard says the craft ran aground in the Exuma Cays.
Read More »SeaTac Voters OK $15 Minimum Wage; Recount Requested
By a margin of 77 votes, residents of the Seattle suburb of SeaTac have approved a $15 minimum wage for workers in and around its international airport, officials say. The measure faces a recount and other challenges.
Read More »Judge Suspends Sentencing Of Would-Be Bomber After NSA Revelations
The sentencing of a Somali-American man convicted of trying to bomb a holiday tree-lighting ceremony in Portland, Ore., in 2010 is in limbo. The hold comes days after the Justice Department notified his lawyers that part of the case against him had been "derived from" secret NSA electronic surveillance.
Read More »Nevada Judge Rejects New Trial For Jailed O.J. Simpson
The judge said the fallen football great is not entitled to a new trial for his 2008 convictions for armed robbery and kidnapping. Simpson is serving a sentence of nine to 33 years in the crimes.
Read More »Three Words For Getaway Day: Soggy, Sloppy And Snowy
On this busiest travel day of the year, millions trying to get somewhere in the eastern half of the U.S. will be dealing with storms.
Read More »Thai Protesters Continue Effort To Topple Government
They took over the country's top anti-crime agency on Wednesday, the fourth day of protests. But the relatively low number of demonstrators indicate they are unlikely to bring down Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra's government.
Read More »Judge Orders Sriracha Factory To Cool It
In Irwindale, Calif., city officials were peppered with complaints about smells coming from the hot sauce factory. Now a judge has said the plant must partially shut down while the company and authorities try to address the problem.
Read More »Good News, Bad News: Jobless Claims Dip, But Key Orders Drop
Fewer Americans filed for unemployment insurance last week. But fewer orders were placed for equipment and other so-called durable goods in October.
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