Hong Kong set for street march, mourns death of protester
Hong Kong is bracing for another massive protest over an unpopular extradition bill, a week after the crisis brought as many as 1 million into the streets.
Indian election reveals role of money, questionable morality
India's recent national election delivered a historic victory to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist party, but also exposed the influence of money, power and questionable morality on the world's largest democracy.
Planned Parenthood building large women's clinic in Alabama despite abortion law
Planned Parenthood is building a women's clinic in Alabama, despite its near-total ban on abortions and opposition from critics who plan to fight against its opening.
Authorities: Man offered money to 'rape and murder' Alaskan
Authorities charge that an Indiana man implicated in the murder of an Alaska teenager had promised millions of dollars to the teens who killed her in exchange for images of the killing, the Anchorage Daily News reports .
Is 2020 Democrat frontrunner Joe Biden already in trouble?
The presidential hopeful's Iowa speech is seen as a flop as his poll numbers take a dip. Former White House press secretary Sean Spicer and Fox News contributor Dan Bongino react.
Trump says he was briefed on Navy sightings of UFOs; 'Do I believe it? Not particularly'
President Trump said he's been briefed by Navy pilots regarding the sightings of unidentified flying objects, but remained skeptical of the existence of UFOs.
Strong quake hits island chain off New Zealand; no tsunami
A magnitude 7.4 earthquake struck an arc of islands off New Zealand on Sunday, and the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said it may cause only minor sea level changes in some coastal areas.
Activists blast Rio gov comment about slum missile strike
A human rights official and community activists are criticizing the governor of Rio de Janeiro state for saying that a missile could be sent to "blow up" drug traffickers in a local slum.
Washington state landowners are asked to take dead whales
Without any more space to store the gray whale carcasses washing ashore in Washington state, a federal agency is asking if landowners can lend their properties as a final resting place for the marine mammals while they decompose.