Eva Longoria cries at Selena Quintanilla star ceremony

The Trumps pay their respects to the fallen: President and First Lady offer solemn floral tribute at Pearl Harbor shrine before departing on Asia tour overshadowed by North Korea crisis Netflix AXES Kevin Spacey: Network cancels Gore Vidal movie and announces it won't air House of Cards if scandal-hit star appears, as three more men accuse him of sexual misconduct More than 20 cities across the nation fear protest marches on Saturday to demand Trump's removal from office could be hijacked by violent anarchists Was soldier at center of Trump condolence call row KIDNAPPED by ISIS militants? Niger village leader says La David Johnson was seized and bound before his body was dumped half-a-mile away FBI report in new JFK release claims Martin Luther King Jr had 'all-night sex orgy' at workshop for church ministers CIA memo released with hundreds of new JFK assassination files says rumors of ... (more)

German reporter visits Saginaw looking for voters who changed mind about Trump

Its been nearly a year since Donald Trump won the presidential election and a German newspaper is on the hunt in Saginaw to see if his supporters are still confident about casting their vote for him. Reporter Herbert Bauernebel, 52, and photographer Tobias Everke, 55, are freelance journalists with Bild, a German tabloid newspaper, based in Berlin.

Trump off to Asia, focus at home

President Donald Trump is being pulled in different directions as he heads to Asia, with his base eager to hear him take a hard line on the Chinese trade and economic practices he railed against as a candidate and others in his administration pushing him to sweep those concerns aside and urge China to tighten the screws on North Korea. At the same time, much of the president's attention has been occupied by urgent matters at home, including indictments against two top campaign aides, the deepening Russia investigation and a high-stakes fight over his tax plan.

Logs reveal hacks of Democrats’ email

Nineteen thousand lines of raw data associated with the theft of emails from Hillary Clinton campaign staff members show how the hackers managed the election-shaking operation. Minute-by-minute logs gathered by the cybersecurity company Secureworks and recently shared with The Associated Press suggest it took the hackers just over a week of work to zero in on and penetrate the personal Gmail account of campaign chairman John Podesta.

Russia’s hackers took only a week to pry into Clinton camp NEW

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton pauses while speaking at a rally in Pittsburgh during a bus tour through the rust belt on July 30. This image shows a portion of a phishing email sent to a Hillary Clinton campaign official on March 19, 2016. An Associated Press investigation into the hackers who disrupted the 2016 U.S. presidential contest has found that they tried to compromise a far wider group of people than has previously been reported using malicious messages like this one.

Fight Breaks Out Among Democrats Over 2016 Campaign

Donna Brazile, the interim chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee during the election, asserted in a new book that the fundraising agreement between the DNC and Hillary Clinton's campaign was unethical because it gave her too much influence on the party's infrastructure. WSJ's Gerald F. Seib explains what have we learned after Special Counsel Robert Mueller unveiled his first two big actions in his investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 campaign.

Bob Corker: Trump’s Call to Investigate Democrats ‘Undermines Our Justice System’

The Republican lawmaker, who has clashed with Trump numerous times, including when he called the White House an "adult day care center" last month, said it is important that the justice system is independent of the president. "Like me, most Americans hope that our justice system is independent and free of political interference," Corker said in a statement Friday.

DNC, Clinton memo set rules on funds

Hillary Clinton's campaign and the Democratic National Committee signed a memorandum of understanding in August 2015 that stated in return for their financial support, the campaign would require "appropriate influence over the financial, strategic and operational use of these raised funds" for general election expenditures, according to a copy of the agreement obtained by CNN. The agreement established rules and guidance around the separate joint fundraising agreement Clinton's campaign signed with the DNC.

DNC, Clinton memo set rules on funds Clinton raised for general election

Hillary Clinton's campaign and the Democratic National Committee signed a memorandum of understanding in August 2015 that stated in return for their financial support, the campaign would require "appropriate influence over the financial, strategic and operational use of these raised funds" for general election expenditures, according to a copy of the agreement obtained by CNN. The agreement established rules and guidance around the separate joint fundraising agreement Clinton's campaign signed with the DNC.

President Trump doesna t know if hea d fire Attorney General Jeff Sessions

President Trump is hammering the Justice Department over a lack of an investigation into Democrats and isn't ruling out firing Attorney General Jeff Sessions if the department doesn't take action against Hillary Clinton. "I don't know," Trump told ABC's Jonathan Karl when asked if the president would fire Sessions if the DOJ doesn't pursue action against Clinton.