Who is Robert Hur, the special counsel leading the Biden classified documents inquiry Hur spent much of this legal career serving in multiple positions in the Department of Justice. He is also the former U.S. attorney in Maryland, appointed by then-President Donald Trump. Dustin Jones
A woman is ordered to repay $2,000 after her employer used software to track her time The remote employee had charged her company for 50 hours that were not associated with her job, a Canadian court found. The company used time-tracking software installed on her laptop. Juliana Kim
New podcast uncovers a true story of family, fraud, land and power in the American West Kim Malcolm talks with Anna King, host of the new podcast Ghost Herd. Anna King
Sloppy handling of classified documents is very serious, ethics lawyer says NPR's Leila Fadel talks to Richard Painter, former White House chief ethics lawyer, about ethical and legal implications of finding classified documents in an office that once belonged to Joe Biden.
What we know about the classified documents found in Biden's thinktank Classified documents from President Joe Biden's term as Vice President were discovered at the Penn Biden Center for Diplomacy and Global Engagement last fall, according to Biden's personal attorneys. Domenico Montanaro
A Romanian court upholds Andrew Tate's arrest on human-trafficking charges A court in Bucharest upheld the 30-day arrest of self-described misogynist Andrew Tate on charges of organized crime, human trafficking and rape, an official said late Tuesday. The Associated Press
Allen Weisselberg sentenced to 5 months for his role in Trump Organization tax fraud The company's longtime chief financial officer had pleaded guilty to 15 felonies and testified against the Trump Organization, which was convicted last month and is set to be sentenced on Friday. Ilya Marritz
A 6-year-old shooter raises difficult questions for the criminal justice system Although Virginia law does not set a minimum age for criminal prosecution, the traditional principles of criminal justice "don't really apply" when the offender is so young, one legal expert said. Becky Sullivan
A bill that would have impacted racial disparity in cocaine crimes died in the Senate The Senate failed to advance a bipartisan bill that would have reduced one of the most persistent racial disparities in criminal justice: the punishment for crack cocaine. Carrie Johnson
A U.S. appeals court blocks a ban on rapid-fire 'bump stocks' A Trump administration ban on the devices, which enable a shooter to rapidly fire multiple rounds from semi-automatic weapons after an initial trigger pull, was struck down by a federal appeals court. The Associated Press