-
Kentucky lawmakers passed a bill that sets limits on when charitable organizations can bail people out of jail.
-
By Recruiting Political Newcomers, A Nashville Movement Seeks To Ax Policies Harmful To Black PeopleBlack Nashville Assembly meetings are full of soulful musical performances — ideas on how to make democracy work for Black people and various people…
-
Daniel Prude was arrested in March after behaving erratically on a city street. Officers placed a protective hood over his head, and Prude ultimately stopped breathing. He died a week later.
-
The instances spanned 40 states and the District of Columbia, and allege excessive force by state and local police, and National Guard troops and federal agents against racial justice protesters.
-
In an interview with David Greene, two men from Webster County, Ky., argue over race at first, but then a disclosure about deeply personal history leads to a bit of unexpected common ground.
-
Bailey Dreibelbis is among the protesters whose terms of release from jail include a ban on attending other demonstrations in the city. Some lawyers say such a limit violates First Amendment rights.
-
Congressman John Yarmuth and other city leaders joined in a protest march on Monday calling for transparency and accountability in the police killing of…
-
Who was Juan de Oñate? Critics object to statues of the Spanish conquistador, the first European to colonize New Mexico and a despot who inflicted misery on Native Americans.
-
Cheered on by supporters both online and on the road, Terry Willis walked from Huntsville, Ala., to the site of George Floyd's death in Minneapolis to protest the injustices faced by Black Americans.
-
The country trio changed its name from Lady Antebellum in June, saying it was "regretful and embarrassed" by the term's racist history. Now it's in a legal fight with a Black artist over the moniker.