Justice Department special counsel John Durham in his final report criticized FBI investigation of Russian interference in 2016 election.
Author: Bart Jansen, USA TODAY
Why presidential records are quickly becoming the ‘dark archives’ of America’s past
The National Archives faces a jump in electronic presidential records, beyond issues with ex-President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden documents.
Georgia prosecutor: Grand jury investigating Trump could decide charges this summer
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis warned of a grand jury decision about a potential indictment against Donald Trump in July or August.
Donald Trump lands in New York to face criminal charges – live updates
Donald Trump traveled to New York Monday and will be arraigned Tuesday as the first president charged criminally. He plans a speech Tuesday evening.
Lawyers for Donald Trump, Michael Cohen square off in fight for credibility in criminal case
Donald Trump’s indictment lawyer Joe Tacopina and Michael Cohen’s lawyer Lanny Davis argued about each side’s crediblity in the pending criminal case.
Trump indicted: How did Michael Cohen arrange hush payments to Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal?
A Manhattan grand jury was investigating Donald Trump’s payments to porn actress Stormy Daniels before he was indicted.
Who is Michael Cohen? Former Trump lawyer is a key witness in New York probe of ex-president
Michael Cohen, a former lawyer and fixer for Donald Trump before he became president, is a key witness in a New York investigation.
Alvin Bragg v. Donald Trump: Inside Manhattan DA’s latest legal tangle with former president
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s investigation of Donald Trump over a hush-money payment to a porn actress is a longtime legal adversary.
Charges against Trump would be a first in US. But other countries? They routinely charge leaders.
World leaders such as Benjamin Netanyahu have faced criminal charges. But Donald Trump could become the first former U.S. leader indicted.
Garland: school board memo aimed at violence, not parent protests; 6 cases referred to local authorities
Attorney General Merrick Garland said the FBI referred six cases of threats against school officials to local officials.