Mother charged with paying $400,000 to have son admitted to UCLA as fake soccer player
By Matthew Ormseth Los Angeles Times
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By Matthew Ormseth Los Angeles Times
By Molly Hennessy-FiskeLos Angeles TimesLAREDO, Texas — The new immigration tent court in this border city feels more like a detention center: barbed wire chain-link fence, metal detectors, security cameras and uniformed guards.
By Rita GiordanoThe Philadelphia InquirerA disturbing new study based on federal data estimates that the first sexual intercourse experience for one in 16 American women was the result of physical force or coercion.
By Brian McVicarmlive.com
By Kalea Hall, Daniel Howes, Sarah Rahal and Candice WilliamsThe Detroit NewsDETROIT — Members of the United Auto Workers went on strike at General Motors Co. plants nationwide at midnight Sunday night, sending 46,000 workers to picket lines in the union's first walkout since the automaker emerged from taxpayer-funded bankruptcy a decade ago.
By Laura KingLos Angeles TimesWASHINGTON — President Trump vigorously defended Brett Kavanaugh on Sunday following a new allegation of sexual misconduct during the Supreme Court justice's college years, as some leading Democratic presidential contenders raised fresh suspicions that Kavanaugh was untruthful during last year's Senate hearings leading to his confirmation to the high court.
By Amy Walkerdpa
By Richard Tribou and David HarrisOrlando Sentinel
By James F. Peltz and Jennifer Haberkorn Los Angeles Times
By Jacob Fischler CQ-Roll Call
By Mark Z. BarabakLos Angeles TimesIt's mid-September, a time when the days grow shorter, the leaves begin to fall and all across the land thoughts turn to ... well, not to presidential politics.
By Wes Parnell and Larry McShaneNew York Daily NewsNEW YORK — The families and friends of 9/11 victims gathered for the 18th year at Ground Zero onWednesday for a memorial service both familiar and freshly heartbreaking.
By Jim WyssMiami HeraldNASSAU, Bahamas — When Hurricane Dorian tore through the Bahamas last week it largely spared the country's capital. But now Nassau is feeling the backlash of the killer storm, as it scrambles to house thousands of evacuees who have been left destitute and homeless.
By Phil WillonLos Angeles TimesSACRAMENTO, Calif. — California is close to adopting strict Obama-era federal environmental and worker safety rules that the Trump administration is dismantling. But as the legislative session draws to a close, the proposal faces fierce opposition from the state's largest water agencies.
By Alice Su and Ryan Ho KilpatrickLos Angeles TimesHONG KONG — It took Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam 13 weeks to withdraw the extradition bill that sparked the city's summer of unrest. But her announcement failed to stop the protests for even one night.
By Jennifer HaberkornLos Angeles TimesWASHINGTON — Congress returns to Washington this week amid mounting pressure from Democrats and the public to enact new gun restrictions, but lawmakers from both parties say meaningful action hangs solely on President Donald Trump.
By Ramin Mostaghim and Melissa EtehadLos Angeles Times
By Jim Wyss, Taylor Dolven and Jimena Tavel and Jay Weaver
By Mark PriceThe Charlotte Observer
By David Jesse Detroit Free Press