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In Oklahoma, proponents of medical marijuana hope to collect enough signatures to put the issue on the ballot. KFOR's Chellie Mills reports.
U.S. officials once disputed NSA contractor Edward Snowden’s claim that he had raised questions about the agency’s domestic surveillance programs before he fled the U.S.
A convicted fine-wine faker is going to prison, but no one knows yet exactly for how long — in part because no one knows exactly how many millions he took from his rich-and-famous victims.
A Massachusetts mother wants to know how her two-year-old son ended up on the roof after she left him with a baby sitter on the first floor. WHDH’s Dan Hausle reports.
Iowa police department encourages Craigslist users to carry out transactions at their station. WHO's Jannay Towne reports.
Tennessee enthusiast fills yard with life-sized dinosaur statues and invites people to come for a visit. WCYB’s Jim Conrad reports.
Officials at a high school in Smithville, Ohio apologize after a sanctioned prank offended some parents and students. WKYC's Lynna Lai reports.
In an exclusive interview with NBC’s Brian Williams, former NSA contractor Edward Snowden claims that the NSA could access information about you through your cellphone. The 30-year-old also says that he has no relationship with Russia and that he would like to return home. NBC chief foreign correspondent Andrea Mitchell reports.
Ohio's executions are on hold until August while lawyers haggle over the state's lethal injection protocol, which was tweaked after the controversial death of killer Dennis McGuire in January.
Columbine High School Principal Frank DeAngelis retires after fulfilling his promise to stay until every student touched by the tragedy there graduated. KUSA's Nelson Garcia reports.