Protecting cheetahs
CBS News' Chip Reid reports from Front Royal, Virginia, where biologists are working to save the cheetah from extinction.
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CBS News' Chip Reid reports from Front Royal, Virginia, where biologists are working to save the cheetah from extinction.
Bodycam and cellphone video shows how a Virginia officer pepper-sprayed a Black and Latino Army lieutenant during a traffic stop in December. Christina Ruffini reports on the details of the stop and the lawsuit against the officers.
The Spotsylvania County Sheriff's Office has released body camera footage and 911 call audio that captures the sound of a sheriff's deputy repeatedly shooting Isiah Brown, a 32-year old Black man, last Wednesday. A lawyer for Brown and his family say the deputy mistook Brown's phone for a gun. Jeff Pegues has the details.
Face the Nation moderator John Dickerson spoke with a group of people in Richmond, Virginia to get their take on President Trump's first month and more
CBS News has learned that there may be new cases of Russian cyberattacks, raising concerns that the hacks may have been more extensive than originally thought. Jeff Pegues has more.
West Virginia has become the epicenter of the nation's opioid problem. CBSN's Elaine Quijano has the latest on the Mountain State's addiction crisis.
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
Most Americans feel the country has grown more divided in recent years. However, two churches in Macon, Georgia may be on the right path to mending the rift. James Brown reports.
There was an open investigation into the warehouse where more than 30 people were killed in a deadly blaze over the weekend, Oakland officials said Sunday; former Cuban dictator Fidel Castro was laid to rest Sunday on the ninth and final day of mourning in the country.
For more than 40 years, the U.S.S. Sequoia was considered "the floating White House." Now, she is withering ashore as a contentious legal battle wages over the yacht's rightful owner and who should pay to repair it. Paula Reid reports.
Federal officials are investigating the shooting death of a black West Virginia teenager as a possible hate crime. Sixty-two-year-old William Pulliam has been charged with murder. A Charleston police complaint says he confessed to the killing. Don Dahler reports on how a convenience store confrontation grew deadly.
Nicole Eramo, a former University of Virginia dean who won $3 million this month in a defamation lawsuit, is speaking out for the first time. She sued Rolling Stone magazine and the author of a story called "A Rape on Campus." The article was later discredited, but not before it changed the life of the university official. Julianna Goldman reports.
The FBI has alerted about a possible terrorist attack on Thanksgiving or Inauguration Day, with a focus on Washington, D.C. and northern Virginia. CBS News' Jeff Pegues reports on the warning.
At his fifth and final stop of the day, Donald Trump rallied supporters in Leesburg, Virginia on Sunday night. Trump continued to speak about how he would repeal Obamacare. Watch his full remarks.
A federal jury found Rolling Stone magazine, its publisher and a reporter liable in a defamation suit brought a former University of Virginia dean involving a now-retracted article about a gang rape at the university. Attorney Philip Segal joins CBSN to discuss the case.
CBS News homeland security correspondent Jeff Pegues joins CBSN with the latest on a possible pre-election terror threat under investigation in Virginia, New York, and Texas.
CBS News has learned about a potential terror threat. Sources say U.S. intelligence has alerted Joint Terrorism Task Forces that al Qaeda could be planning attacks in three states for Monday, the day before the election. It is believed New York, Texas and Virginia are all possible targets. The credibility of the intelligence has not been confirmed. Jeff Pegues reports.
Early voting is underway throughout most of the United States, but that has not stopped Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump from going full throttle on the campaign trail; Shelter dogs spend most of their time in cages, with little opportunity to move around freely.
The Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case of Gavin Grimm, a transgender Virginia teen. The court will decide whether the female-born Grimm can use the boys' restroom at his school. The court's ruling could be used to resolve similar disputes across the country. Marlie Hall has more.
Donald Trump took questions from veterans during a campaign stop in Herndon, Virgina.
Alfred Street Baptist Church in Alexandria, Virginia, is a founding donor for the Smithsonian's new National Museum of African American History and Culture, committing $1 million in donations to the museum. The senior pastor, Rev. Dr. Howard-John Wesley, tells CBS News about the church's donor base and why the members wanted to get involved in the historic project.
Nicole's mother, Tammy Weeks, father David Lovell, and stepmother, Terri Lovell remember the 13-year-old and offer a message for parents in the hopes of keeping their kids safe from online predators.
Virginia Tech student and radio reporter Claire Rigney talks with"48 Hours'" Peter Van Sant about how the murder of Nicole Lovell, 13, of Blacksburg, affected life on campus and the reaction after the arrests of two of its own.
The man who shot president Ronald Reagan in 1981 is out of a Washington mental hospital. John Hinckley, Jr. was hidden from cameras as he went home to his 90-year-old mother in Williamsburg, Va. In late July, a federal judge ruled that the now 61-year-old is no longer a danger to himself or the public. Tony Dokoupil has more.
In nearly 11 weeks, American voters will decide who the next president of the United States will be. Both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are vying for African-American voters. Trump recently made a pitch that stirred controversy once again for the GOP candidate. Errol Barnett has a report.
The Senate returns on Monday to continue work on a bipartisan deal to end the government shutdown, now on Day 41. Follow live updates here.
The decision by eight Democratic senators to embrace a deal to end the government shutdown has infuriated many members of the party.
Airlines are expected to cancel 4% of Monday's flights at 40 of the busiest airports in the U.S. to comply with an order from the FAA.
"You need to begin right now returning to the Hill," House Speaker Mike Johnson told House members on Monday, ahead of a potential
President Trump on Sunday floated the idea of tapping his administration's tariff revenue to send checks to most Americans.
The Supreme Court rejected a bid by former Kentucky county clerk Kim Davis to overturn its landmark decision on same-sex marriage.
Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna of California said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is "out of touch with where the party's base is."
The Senate deal to end the government shutdown would extend funding through January and promise Democrats a vote on health care.
Ghislaine Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking co-conspirator, is planning to apply for a commutation of her 20-year prison sentence, House Judiciary Committee Democrats say.