-
The Office of Personnel Management says it's notifying current and former employees whose personally identifiable information may have been compromised.
-
If you haven't been paying attention, here's a primer on the changes Congress is considering making to U.S. surveillance practices.
-
In an executive order, President Obama curbed the kind of equipment local police can acquire from the federal government. He also demanded more accountability in exchange for other equipment.
-
WASHINGTON — As Garry Mauro drove up to Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern’s Texas headquarters in October 1972, a young couple burst out…
-
A person flying a small drone-like device too close to the White House was taken into custody. It's another in a line of security instances around the White House.
-
The Red-Headed Stranger has a new memoir out, titled It's A Long Story. On a tour bus in Thackerville, Okla., Nelson explains to NPR's David Greene why no one can tell him what to do.
-
The president said "there's no excuse for the kind of violence" that has erupted after peaceful protests following the death of a black man who suffered a serious spine injury while in police custody.
-
Former press secretary Dana Perino's new book, And the Good News Is ..., details her time at the White House, including heated moments in the press briefing room.
-
As Clinton launches into her second presidential campaign, she'll be reintroducing herself to voters who largely think they have her figured out.
-
The panel angrily questions Secret Service Director Joe Clancy about why additional videos of the March 4 incident near the White House weren't preserved and made available.