Report: Trans Antifa Member Charged with Detonating Explosive Outside Alabama AG’s Office
A man has been charged for his alleged role in detonating an explosive device outside of the Alabama Attorney General’s Office in February.
A man has been charged for his alleged role in detonating an explosive device outside of the Alabama Attorney General’s Office in February.
Ivey announced the reward a few days after law enforcement released images and video of a person of interest in the explosion.
Law enforcement released video footage of a person of interest in the explosion outside of the Alabama Attorney General’s Office.
An explosive device was detonated outside of Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall’s office early Saturday morning, he said in a statement.
Twenty-two state attorneys general requested the Supreme Court halt Special Counsel Jack Smith’s rush to prosecute former President Donald Trump for allegedly conspiring to overturn the results of the 2020 election until the Court rules on whether the trial is permitted by the Constitution.
Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall announced Friday afternoon that the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Alabama had lifted the injunction against Alabama’s Human Life Protection Act, passed by the Alabama Legislature in 2019.
Alabama Attorney Steven Marshall argued Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson wanted a fundamental redesign of the criminal justice system.
Senate confirmation hearings wrap up Thursday for President Joe Biden’s Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson.
A coalition of 17 state attorneys general is defending an Arkansas law that protects children from life-altering transgender procedures.
A coalition of 22 state attorneys general called upon Congress to restore the Hyde Amendment and prohibit taxpayer funding of abortions.
Republican attorneys general (AGs) across the country are prepared to fight the recently introduced court-packing legislation, as indicated by their vocal statements of opposition to it, endorsements of the Keep Nine amendment, and vows to explore legal routes to challenge the legislation.
Over the last several days, sheriffs in at least three Alabama counties have expressed their intention to defy the State of Alabama’s “Safer at Home” coronavirus edict, which, if interpreted literally, would restrict church gatherings.