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A funeral for Julie Mott, who died of cystic fibrosis, was held on Aug. 15, and her body disappeared hours after it ended.

Reuters photographer Carlos Barria returns to New Orleans to revisit the locations captured in his photographs a decade after Hurricane Katrina.

Cannabis sales shift from street corner to storefront as opportunists grab what they see as the biggest investment opportunity since the dot-com boom.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency was aware of the potential for a catastrophic "blowout" at an abandoned mine that could release "large volumes" of wastewater laced with toxic heavy metals.

A burglar steals a cradle, toys, and other necessities while Iowa mom is giving birth. WHO's Jodi Whitworth reports.

Get a bird's-eye-view of how officials are fighting wildfires in Washington.

Four years ago, Local 361 apprentice Rob LeFurgy wasn’t even sure what an ironworker did. All the decorated Iraq War veteran knew for certain was that he sorely missed the brotherhood and sense of higher purpose he had known serving in the U.S. Army. Becoming an ironworker, however, has gone a long way toward satisfying those intense feelings of longing and restoring the 28-year-old’s hope in a brighter future. 

Out in the Atlantic, Hurricane Danny is getting closer to land, packing top winds of 100-miles-per-hour.

Russia has taken on the United States and Europe in a sanctions war, which has recently spilled into some decidedly odd public stunts.

A jury ordered a grocery-store chain to pay Michael Jordan $8.9 million for invoking his name in a steak ad without his permission.