Masood Farivar is a Senior Analyst in VOA’s South and Central Asia Division.
Deadly April attack was allegedly carried out by a 25-year-old self-identified member of 'Involuntary Celibate' fringe group
Legal experts say questions that were published by media on Monday are not what prosecutors would ask a subject or the target of a probe
According to the US attorney general, most of the fentanyl in the US comes from China
Bipartisan bill would codify Justice Department regulations but is unlikely to become law in the face of opposition from Republicans in Congress
Europe, which historically has had the freest press in the world and had eight of the freest press sectors in the world, notched the largest decline in its regional indicator
Instead of anti-government target, groups turn vitrole on Muslims, immigrants, the Antifa
Hannity, who repeatedly bashed the FBI on his Fox News show for raiding Cohen's office, drew immediate fire for failing to disclose his relationship with Cohen
China remains world's top executioner, though exact number of executions remains uknown
'Attorney—client privilege is dead,' President Donald Trump tweeted, day after FBI raided New York office of president's long-time attorney Michael Cohen
Landmark settlement resolves 2012 lawsuit brought by Muslim groups, challenging the lawfulness of police program that was created to gather intelligence on Muslims after 9/11 attacks
Sessions urged U.S. Attorneys in the border states of Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas, “to adopt immediately a zero-tolerance policy for all offenses referred for prosecution” under laws that make it a crime to enter the United States without proper documents
They were given a year and a day in prison with credit for time served
Edin Dzeko and Sammy Rasema Yetisen have been convicted of killing Croats in 1993 and lying about their crimes on their refugee, permanent resident and citizenship applications
Judges would have to meet a quota to receive positive performance reviews
Lawsuit seeks an injunction against enforcement of a state law that effectively blocks the sale or transfer of federal lands
Russian broadcaster blames move on US Justice Department; local programming carrier says no politics behind decision
Cross-border investigations and prosecutions of foreign bribery have increased in recent years as a number of countries, under growing public pressure, have passed legislation to crack down on corporate graft
Report from U.S. Sentencing Commission found 'no difference in recidivism rates for offenders who were released early ... and offenders who had served their full sentences'
Suspect is identified as Tranh Cong Phan, 43, of Seattle, Washington
Hackers stole research worth billions of dollars after breaching computer systems at 320 universities in 22 countries, including 144 American universities
Load more