Secret Service launches probe into how an apparently intoxicated man got into top Biden security aide’s home while agents were outside guarding it.
Author: Josh Meyer, USA TODAY
Covid-19 origin story is shrouded in mystery. Is Congress the right detective?
GOP and Democratic lawmakers say US needs 9/11-style commission to solve many questions about Covid-19 origin and U.S. response.
It’s the end of the world as we know it: ‘Godfather of AI’ warns nation of trouble ahead
‘Godfather of AI’ who recently quit Google warns of potential human extinction. He also predicts a future where AI has an IQ of 210.
Here’s why the US can’t stop military and intel members from leaking top-secret documents
Jack Teixeira is accused of joining Edward Snowden, Chelsea Manning, other insider threats who’ve accessed classified intelligence in ways the US can’t deter.
In defending gifts from a GOP billionaire, Clarence Thomas raises more questions among his critics
For decades, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has enjoyed a relationship with a billionaire GOP donor. Critics say that needs to be investigated
Trump lawyers blast DA Alvin Bragg’s case, but legal experts say they’ll regret it. Here’s why
Legal experts say DA is smart to keep his best evidence under wraps, even as Donald Trump’s defense lawyers blast case for having too few details.
Stormy Daniels said she’d dance in the streets if Trump was indicted. Now she’s sad it happened
Stormy Daniels was unaware of Trump’s indictment for nearly two hours. “She was surprised,” her lawyer, Clark Brewster, told USA TODAY.
A Donald Trump mugshot? Fingerprints? What happens next after Trump indictment
Donald Trump’s indictment raises a wide array of logistical issues, including how he will be taken into custody and what happens after that.
Is Donald Trump likely to be arrested soon? Will he be indicted? What we know
Questions loom over whether Donald Trump will be indicted. Former prosecutors said it’s unlikely the president will be arrested and handcuffed.
Biden’s new cybersecurity strategy shifts the burden from people to Big Tech
The Biden administration rolled out a new cybersecurity strategy that calls on U.S. law enforcement and military agencies to be more proactive.