Titanic disaster
More than a century after the Titanic sank in the North Atlantic Ocean, there are new clues to the cause of the disaster, reports Mark Phillips.
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More than a century after the Titanic sank in the North Atlantic Ocean, there are new clues to the cause of the disaster, reports Mark Phillips.
Russia and Turkey have agreed to monitor a cease-fire in Syria that will go into effect on Friday. CBS News foreign correspondent Holly Williams joins CBSN from Istanbul with the latest details.
Russian President Vladimir Putin says a Syrian cease-fire agreement has been reached. Russia and Turkey will "guarantee" the truce, which will take effect at midnight local time. Russia's foreign minister says it covers 60,000 rebel fighters. Holly Williams reports.
A new report found that same Russian hacking group that infiltrated the Democratic National Committee broke into a Ukrainian military app that helped target artillery fire. Russian-backed separatists used the information to target Ukrainian troops. David Martin reports.
A woman lost the love of her life in the Oakland warehouse fire in California. Ben Tracy reports a photographer has given her a priceless gift.
Nasty weather continued to batter parts of the country Friday, even icing over Boston firefighters' battle with a six-alarm fire. Wind chills in Minneapolis may reach 40 degrees below zero on Sunday morning, the lowest in 16 years. Jamie Yuccas reports.
As many as 9,000 people were allowed to leave the remaining rebel-held enclave in eastern Aleppo Friday morning. But renewed shelling put a halt to any more evacuation attempts. Both sides blamed each other for the renewed fighting, and thousands of civilians still remain trapped. Elizabeth Palmer reports.
Fighting has resumed in the Syrian city of Aleppo after a cease-fire deal fell apart. CBS News' Holly Williams spoke to CBSN from the Turkey-Syria border.
Initial reports suggested the fire was caused when an oxygen cylinder exploded in the ward of Ibn al-Khatib hospital.
Griffin Madden was one of the victims killed in the Oakland, California, warehouse fire. His grieving girlfriend Saya Tomioka recalled that a photographer had taken the couple's picture on a recent trip to New York City. She tried to find the photographer for a copy to remember her lost love. Ben Tracy reports.
The Great Smoky Mountains National Park and the resort town of Gatlinburg, Tennessee, reopened to the public after wildfires killed 14 people and injured more than 130 others. Manuel Bojorquez shows how the area is slowly recovering.
One week after 36 people were killed in a warehouse fire in Oakland, California, investigators are still trying to figure out the cause. Carter Evans has the latest.
Two young people accused of starting deadly wildfires in East Tennessee may appear Thursday in juvenile court. Fourteen people died in Tennessee's biggest fire in 100 years that burned 17,000 acres and hundreds of buildings. The suspects were charged Thursday with aggravated arson. Manuel Bojorquez reports from the city of Gatlinburg, where people are now returning to their homes and businesses.
An ATF investigator said Tuesday that authorities do not believe the deadly Oakland warehouse fire was set intentionally, but a criminal investigation is still underway. Search teams have looked through all but 10 percent of the building, and the death toll stands at 36. David Begnaud reports.
36 lives were lost in the Oakland warehouse fire, which started late Friday night. These are just a few of the young lives cut tragically short
Prosecutors say that murder charges are possible as the investigation continues into the deadly Oakland warehouse fire. At least 36 people died in the blaze. Correspondent Edward Lawrence joins CBSN with the latest details.
CBS News' Mireya Villarreal reports from Oakland, where hundreds of people gathered to mourn at least 36 people who died in a devastating fire over the weekend.
Hundreds gathered at an Oakland vigil Monday night to remember the victims of the warehouse fire. Thirty-six people were killed in the "Ghost Ship" studios and illegal living spaces. Mireya Villarreal reports on how the community is dealing with the enormous loss.
Prosecutors in Oakland, California, say murder charges are possible in Friday's deadly warehouse fire. Thirty-six people were killed in the studios and illegal living spaces known as the "Ghost Ship." Investigators have not pinpointed the cause of the fire. David Begnaud reports.
For the last 48 hours, recovery workers have searched 70 percent of the building; Russian forces are on the ground in Aleppo, backing the Syrian military as it systematically destroys neighborhoods held by rebels
At least 36 people died in a warehouse fire in Northern California Saturday night, including the 17-year-old son of a sheriff's deputy and a 22-year-old singer. Mireya Villarreal spoke to family and friends of the missing and dead, and reports from Oakland.
No one was supposed to be living in the Ghost Ship, the Oakland building that burned down during a party Saturday night. The building is now under investigation for potential code violations related to unpermitted construction inside. Carter Evans reports.
For the last 48 hours, recovery workers have searched 70 percent of the building. No one knows exactly how many people were in the space during the fire. The two-story warehouse, known as Ghost Ship, had no sprinklers or smoke alarms. David Benaud has more.
At least 36 people are dead after a tragic warehouse fire in Oakland, California, and officials expect that number to rise. For now, the search has been halted as the fire chief says the building is "too dangerous" to enter. CBS News correspondent Carter Evans joins CBSN from Oakland with the latest details on the investigation.
California authorities have recovered 36 bodies from a warehouse concert fire. CBS News' Carter Evans reports from Oakland.
President Trump has been briefed on a wide array of military and covert tools that can be used against Iran that go well beyond conventional airstrikes, Pentagon officials said.
In an interview with CBS News' Norah O'Donnell on Monday, Iran's exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi said, "We need action to be taken."
Nearly one year after the mass pardon of more than 1,500 Trump-supporting Capitol riot defendants, House Democrats are asking whether any of the pardoned rioters are now working for ICE.
President Trump's remarks about taking Greenland by military force have prompted bipartisan criticism from lawmakers who have said they do not support acquiring the Danish territory in such a way.
President Trump said Monday he's imposing 25% tariffs on all countries that do business with Iran, as the administration pressures the Iranian government amid anti-regime protests.
Lindsey Halligan's deputy in the U.S. attorney's office in the Eastern District of Virginia, Robert McBride, was fired after refusing to lead the prosecution of James Comey, a source said.
The state of Minnesota, along with the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul, are suing Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and other federal officials in an effort to stop the surge of federal law enforcement officials coming into the state.
"We have rights. Fundamental rights," Polis said. "When you're minding your business and doing your own thing, really, the government shouldn't interfere."
Patrick Wei, a former U.S. Navy sailor who sold manuals for ships and operating systems to an operative working for China, was sentenced to more than 16 years in prison, prosecutors said.