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Surveillance cameras captured a thief who took off with an entire display case in the middle of a busy day at the store.
At least 16 massive fires have swept through 400,000 acres of Washington, according to the governor's office.
A mistrial has been declared in the trial of former Charlotte police officer Randall Kerrick, accused of manslaughter in the shooting death of unarmed motorist Jonathan Ferrell. NBC's Dave Wagner reports.
Friends and neighbors show their support for former President Jimmy Carter during his fight against cancer with campaign-style signs. WALB's Aaryn Valenzuela reports.
Millions of bugs are swarming the Black Rock Desert as Burning Man preparations get underway. KRNV's Melissa Matheney reports.
The security guard died shortly after being shot in New York City's SoHo neighborhood, law enforcement sources said. The gunman committed suicide.
The actress got into a lengthy exchange with Cruz over gay rights and religious liberty Friday. Religious liberty is a issue of Cruz's campaign.
A judge in North Carolina on Friday declared a mistrial in a police officer's 2013 killing of an unarmed former college football player.
The recently released minutes of the last meeting of the Federal Reserve Board’s Open Market Committee revealed there was serious discussion of the fact the labor market still showed signs of weakness. A primary issue was the lack of evidence of strong wage growth, which would be a clear signal the labor market was tightening. This has unleashed the Wall Street bettors, who want a jump on the Fed’s changing monetary policy, giving them more active play on the bond market, where interest rate movements can fuel their gambling addiction. The voices being raised to have the Fed raise interest rates march out lots of theory to predict uncontrolled inflation, despite a global slowdown, falling oil and natural resource prices, and flat real wages. We must hope that the Fed makes policy based on what is good for the economy, not what is good for the reckless gamblers on Wall Street.
"Right now there is a feeling of fear in the marketplace," one analyst says.