Supreme Court decision limits excessive force lawsuits against Border Patrol agents NPR's Sacha Pfeiffer talks with SCOTUSblog contributing writer Howard Wasserman about a Supreme Court decision which weakens the ability to sue Border Patrol and federal agents over excessive force. Patrick Jarenwattananon
GEICO may have to pay $5.2 million to a woman who got an STD in an insured car The woman says a man infected her with HPV when they had unprotected sex in his 2014 Hyundai Genesis. She's now trying to enforce a large arbitration award. Bill Chappell
An Arizona man says American Airlines is to blame for his wrongful arrest Michael Lowe says he is still suffering from trauma following a 17-day experience in a New Mexico jail, according to a lawsuit filed Monday. Jonathan Franklin
A Florida man is accused of $2.5 million COVID-19 relief fraud A 34-year-old man was charged with one count of wire fraud after being accused of filing a fraudulent loan application in 2020. Shauneen Miranda
The House passed new gun measures after heart wrenching testimony from survivors Steve Inskeep asks Greg Jackson Jr. of the Community Justice Action Fund about a House vote on gun reforms and the calls from gun violence survivors to pass new legislation.
The House passes a gun control bill in response to the Buffalo and Uvalde shootings It has almost no chance of becoming law as the Senate pursues negotiations focused on improving mental health programs, bolstering school security and enhancing background checks. The Associated Press
Trump is set to undergo questioning in July in N.Y. civil probe Donald Trump, his namesake son and his daughter Ivanka have agreed to answer questions under oath next month in the New York attorney general's civil investigation into his business practices. The Associated Press
Justice Department launches review of law enforcement's response in Uvalde Experts are already on the ground in Texas. They plan to review documents, interview law enforcement officers, and consult with families of victims and survivors. Carrie Johnson
Understanding the complaints from Simone Biles and others seeking $1B from the FBI The group of women and girls say the bureau failed to properly follow up on credible claims against the sports doctor Larry Nassar in 2015, which allowed him to continue abusing victims. Joe Hernandez
D.C. lawmakers pass a bill that would ban firing employees for failed marijuana tests Employers can still give drug tests or fire an employee if they are acting under federal guidelines, or if an employee consumed marijuana at work or while performing work-related duties. Ayana Archie