The Supreme Court unanimously upheld the state legislative districts in Arizona drawn by an independent commission, rebuffing complaints that the electoral maps diminished the clout of Republican voters.
The US Department of Justice has launched a criminal investigation into the widespread international tax avoidance schemes exposed by the Panama Papers leak, published by the Guardian and other journalistic partners.
SCOTUS to consider legal challenge to Obama's executive action on immigration as lives hang in the balance. The Supreme Court decision is expected to redefine the balance of power between the executive and legislative branches of government.
A bipartisan bill that allows families victimized by the 9/11 terrorist attacks to sue Saudi Arabia ran into sharp setbacks, as the White House threatened a veto and a GOP senator privately sought to block the measure.
In a meeting held on Monday, the Cuba's top leaders and officials have expressed their concerns on the inefficiency of the economy. Also, they took note of the private sector as source of US subversion.
US prosecutors charged two investment firm executives who lied about putting funds in tech companies. Instead of investing $17M in Alibaba and the like, money was used to buy luxuries for themselves.
India's top IT company Tata Consultancy Services was fined $940 million by a U.S. Federal Court in Wisconsin Friday in a trade secret lawsuit by U.S.-based medical software company Epic Systems. TCS said it would appeal against the verdict in higher courts.
The European Union (EU) has been reaching great heights in its most recent dealings with Iran talking about economy, energy, education, migration and transport. According to reports, the visit also comes with the possibility of EU helping out Iran in its re-entry to the global financial system in Washington.
It has been confirmed that at $34.5 Billion lawsuit is on its way against U.S. Corporations and other Americans supporting West Bank Settlements in a filing by a group of Palestinian activists represented by the Martin McMahon and Associates law firm on Monday.
The proposed budget for the year 2017 by the US House of Congress is in peril. Lawmakers are not just cramming to beat the deadline but also need to gather enough votes from the GOP-controlled panel.
A U.S. court ruling cleared the way for Argentina to pay its debts and return to global credit markets early next week, as a new president tries to turn the page on almost a decade and a half of messy defaults and litigation.
A US government lawsuit against one of the biggest activist hedge funds could provide more clarity in a long-running debate over exactly what it means to be an activist investor.
The Justice Department has sued to stop Halliburton from acquiring oilfield services rival Baker Hughes, claiming it would eliminate critical competition in the energy market.
The US Treasury Department intends to soon issue a long-delayed rule forcing banks to seek the identities of people behind shell company account holders, after the "Panama Papers" leak.
The U.S. judge who oversaw the investigation that led to the resignation of former CIA director David Petraeus is giving the Justice Department until Friday to ask her to keep secret any court documents that were part of the case.
A federal judge in New Orleans has granted final approval to an estimated $20 billion settlement, resolving years of litigation over the 2010 BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
The US Supreme Court agreed to review a case in which a Colorado juror allegedly expressed racial bias against a Latino defendant during deliberations.
A major US trade group representing manufacturers said it filed a lawsuit seeking to bar a new Labor Department rule requiring companies to disclose when they seek advice about countering union campaigns.
The growing number of transnational gang members in the U.S is alarming. This is the reason for the operation made by the federal authorities which resulted to the arrest of over 1,000 gang members throughout the country.