John Hinckley, Who Shot President Reagan, Wins Unconditional Release A jury found John Hinckley not guilty by reason of insanity in 1982. On Monday, his lawyer said the "momentous event" of Hinckley's full release in June 2022 is appropriate and required by the law. Carrie Johnson
A Jury In New York Begins Deliberations In R. Kelly's Federal Trial After six weeks of hearing from accusers, ex-employees and expert witnesses, the jury decides what's next for Kelly. He faces charges including sexual exploitation of a child, bribery and kidnapping. Anastasia Tsioulcas
R. Kelly's Federal Trial Is In The Hands Of The Jury After six weeks of emotionally charged testimony, jury deliberation begins in the New York federal trial of disgraced R&B superstar R. Kelly. If convicted he could spend 10 years to life in prison. Andrew Limbong
Biden Says Border Agents' Use Of Horses Against Migrants Was Dangerous And Wrong President Biden says U.S. Border Patrol agents' use of horses — and in at least one instance, long reins — to chase Haitian migrants was "outrageous." Bill Chappell
The Elizabeth Holmes Trial Is Sparking A Gender Debate In Silicon Valley The debate: Why have male CEOs, who promised the moon and failed, not been prosecuted? Holmes faces possible prison time over fraud charges tied to her former blood-testing company Theranos. Bobby Allyn
7 Lawmakers Face Ethics Complaints For Not Filing Their Personal Stock Transactions Seven House lawmakers are facing ethics complaints for violating the Stock Act, which polices insider trading, because of a recent bipartisan trend of lawmakers ignoring disclosure requirements. Deirdre Walsh
More On The Investigations Into Video Game Publisher Giant Activision Blizzard NPR's Audie Cornish speaks with Wall Street Journal reporter Kirsten Grind about the recent turmoil at video game company Activision Blizzard. Ashley Brown
U.S. Border Agents Chased Migrants On Horseback. A Photographer Explains What He Saw "I thought the Haitians were quite scared, and I think there was probably some panic which resulted in them trying to run around the horses," photographer Paul Ratje says. Bill Chappell
The Pandemic Puts Criminal Courts Behind Schedule As Violent Crime Spikes New York's mayor accuses courts of being slow to get back up to speed, saying they're needed to combat violent crime. Have slower courts and fewer pretrial detentions added to the spike in violence? Martin Kaste
Prosecution Rests Its Case In R. Kelly Sex Crimes And Racketeering Trial Over the five weeks of testimony, federal prosecutors presented 45 witnesses, including 11 alleged victims. Andrew Limbong