Sunoco to Pay $4 Million, Replace Animal Habitats in Pipeline Settlement
Sunoco agreed to pay $4 million in a settlement from a 2020 pipeline spill that damaged Marsh Creek State Park in Pennsylvania. The pipeline will change places.
Wisconsin Lawmakers Want Prosecutor Removed Over Low Bail for Parade Deaths
Darrell Brooks Jr. was out on a previous $1,000 bail when the parade incident occurred. District Attorney John Chisholm said the bail was "inappropriately low."
U.S. Airstrike in Syria Targeting Al-Qaeda Leader Wounds Family of 6
A Syrian family of six, including four children, was injured by the strike. A 10-year-old boy remains in the hospital with head injuries.
Belarus Bans E.U., U.K., Airlines, Western Imports as Retaliatory Sanctions
The ban on western imports is retaliation to what Belarus says is an "illegal external sanctions pressure aimed at undermining the sovereignty of Belarus."
Treasury Wants to Regulate All-Cash Real Estate Deals to Reduce Corruption
Only 12 U.S. cities required title insurance companies to disclose peoples' identities making all-cash purchases of $300,000 homes through shell companies.
Haitian Gang Releases 3 More U.S. Missionaries, Still Holds 12 for Ransom
Ohio-based Christian Aid Ministries released a statement Monday saying that the three missionaries released are "safe and seem to be in good spirits."
10 Russian Citizens Positive COVID, 2 with Omicron Variant
Russia announced the first cases of Omicron variant after 10 citizens returned from South Africa and tested positive for COVID, two of which were for Omicron.
Mother of 5 Charged with Creating 'Extremist Group', 4 Years Belarus Prison
Volha Zalatar was sentenced to serve four years in prison for creating an "extremist organization" when she organized walks and concerts for a local group.
Travel Restrictions May Buy Some Time and Delay Omicron Variant, WHO Says
WHO said new travel restrictions could delay the virus but every country must be prepared for a surge in cases, which have increased globally for several weeks.
Waukesha Condo Evacuated Over Collapse Fears, 'Trying to Avoid a 'Florida''
An engineering report showed a six-story condo building in Waukesha had compromised structural columns and was evacuated due to it being in "imminent danger."
Porn Found on Josh Duggar's Workplace Computer Evaded Tracking: Analyst
Josh Duggar's workplace computer contained a Linux operating system and a partition which allowed the computer to evade tracking, an analyst testified Thursday
South African Student Positive for Omicron in Malaysia Prior to WHO Alert
The Malaysian Health Minister said the student had already arrived in Malaysia and tested positive before South Africa alerted the WHO about their first case.
Election Workers Say Threats and Harassment Are From Ballot Fraud Claims
One of the election workers was relocated by the FBI after the bureau deemed it unsafe for her to remain at her home from people showing up multiple times.
Experts Say Rise in U.S. Autism Cases Brings More Awareness, Better Service
The analysis done by the CDC said in 2018 children who were 8-years-old were diagnosed with autism 1 in 44 times compared to 1 in 54 times during 2016.
14-Year-Old on Bike Ride Fatally Stabbed at Random by Homeless Man, Police
"I would best describe it as an innocent child victim having a chance encounter with a very violent criminal," Palm Beach Gardens Chief Clinton Shannon said.
U.N. Predicts 274M People Will Need Humanitarian Aid in 2022, Needs $41B
OCHA officials believe there will be a 17 percent increase of people in 2022 who need immediate humanitarian aid.
Los Angeles County Buries over 1700 Unclaimed Dead in Mass Grave Ceremony
The Los Angeles County streamed the ceremony to honor the 1,780 unclaimed who died in 2018 as they were placed in a mass grave Wednesday.
Florida Man Confesses Shooting Wife, 2 Adult Kids So 'They Didn't Suffer'
"When he was asked why he didn't just shoot himself, he said he was too scared to do that," Nassau County Sheriff Bill Leeper said about William Conway Broyles.
South Korea Has Record Number of COVID Patients as Serious or Critical
In South Korea, there are 733 patients who are deemed to be in serious or critical condition and the COVID-19 ICU's are at 90 percent capacity.
Josh Duggar's Prior Confession to Molesting 4 Girls Can Be Used in Trial
"The child pornography victims in this case are approximately the same ages as the victims of defendant's hands-on child-molestation offenses," said the order.
DOJ Says It's Investigating Utah Girl's Suicide After Bullying Allegations
Isabella "Izzy" Tichenor was allegedly bullied at school. Her mother alleges the teacher and district were informed and did nothing about the situation before Izzy took her own life.
Ghislaine Maxwell's Lawyers Say Accuser's Testimony Doesn't Match FBI
The witness "Jane" said that she never changed her story and that her statements with the FBI were never recorded, someone was only "jotting down notes."
New Species of Dog-Sized Dinosaur With 'Really Bizarre Tail' Found in Chile
"Books on prehistoric animals for kids need to update and put this weird tail in there....It just looks crazy," Chilean paleontologist Alex Vargas said.
58.4M Tons of Plastic Will End Up in World's Oceans Every Year By 2030
The report showed that a DNA study found bacteria and viruses from humans and animals on plastic that could potentially spread disease.
England, France Ignored Migrants' Calls for Help on Sinking Boat, Survivor
One survivor said they made calls to French and British police asking for help but were told to call the other. Twenty-seven people died.
Mississippi's Only Abortion Clinic Doubling Hours, Treat Out-of-State Women
The only abortion clinic in Mississippi is now open six days a week to help women from Texas and Louisana after Texas passed the new abortion law in September.
South Korea's 5 Omicron Cases All Connected to Travel to Nigeria
Three remaining cases are connected to a couple who traveled from Nigeria to South Korea on November 24, and their friend who picked them up from the airport and drove them home.
Community Raises $75k to Help College Advisor Buy First Home
Lyllye Reynolds-Parker was able to buy her dream home after the community at University of Oregon raised the money since she had done so much for the students.
Poland Digitizes Pregnancy Data, May Limit Divorces to Increase Birthrate
The bill would give the head of the proposed Family and Demographic Institute access to pregnancy data and have the power to not approve divorces.
Clemency Denied for Death Row Inmate Who Attorneys Say Argue Mentally Ill
The Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board rejected a clemency request for Donald Grant in a 4-1 vote despite his lawyers arguing he suffered from brain damage.