The Baltimore Ravens were a field goal away from making the NFL playoffs. The thinnest of margins kept them out of the postseason for the first time since 2021 and left rookie kicker Tyler Loop with ...
The State/Lake “L” station in the Loop closed Monday for construction and won’t open again until 2029. The 120-year-old station is one of the CTA’s most heavily used and serves the Purple, Pink, Brown ...
The final game of the 2025 NFL regular season may have been the best one, and it came down to the final seconds. Twenty-seven points were scored in the fourth quarter instead of 30, as Baltimore ...
With two seconds left on the clock, the Baltimore Ravens put their season in a rookie's hands. Kicker Tyler Loop trotted out to the field looking to send his team to the postseason with a 44-yard ...
The Department of Justice on Wednesday said they were reviewing more than one million additional files potentially related to Jeffrey Epstein. The Trump administration missed the Dec. 19 deadline set ...
The Justice Department’s leadership asked career prosecutors in Florida to volunteer over the “next several days” to help redact the Epstein files, in the latest Trump administration push toward ...
The Justice Department released nearly 30,000 more pages of documents related to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, including many that reference President Donald Trump. The new batch ...
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, will force a vote on suing the Trump administration for a full release of the Jeffrey Epstein files. The Senate will vote on the measure when ...
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said Sunday that all material featuring President Trump in files linked to the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein will be released. “The White House has said ...
A total of 16 photos were taken down at some point on Saturday from the website that the Justice Department created. One featured an open drawer containing other photos, including at least one of ...
From photos of former president Bill Clinton to images of strange scrapbooks, the Justice Department’s release is curious but far from revelatory. Released in four volumes, the 3,951 documents the DOJ ...