Lawmakers Call For Investigation After NPR Report On Troubled Student Loan Program NPR found the vast majority of student loan borrowers with disabilities aren't getting the debt relief they're owed. Now, a bipartisan group of lawmakers is asking for an investigation. Cory Turner
Washington state revamps police deadly force investigations New rules are coming for independent investigations when police use deadly force in Washington. They require more power for civilians, and more help for families of the slain person. Amy Radil
Judiciary Committee Weighs Whether To Bring Articles Of Impeachment NPR's Rachel Martin talks to lawyer Alan Baron about the impeachment inquiry against President Trump. Baron served as special impeachment counsel to the House Judiciary Committee.
Banks Must Provide Trump's Financial Records To Congress, Federal Appeals Court Rules Lawmakers want information stretching back nearly a decade from Deutsche Bank and Capitol One on President Trump, his family members and businesses. Trump is expected to appeal to the Supreme Court. Bobby Allyn
Will a high-volt line be coming to the Eastside? A neighborhood group is taking the city of Bellevue to court over a major power-line project. Puget Sound Energy wants to build a high-volt line, and needs approval from Bellevue and surrounding cities to do it. Paige Browning
More money needed for Washington's rape kit backlog Washington state needs more money to investigate and prosecute cold cases of rape, according to a report out Tuesday by an advisory group tracking the state’s backlog of untested rape kits. Anna Boiko-Weyrauch
All For Naught? Supreme Court Indicates Gun Case May Be Moot At issue was a New York City law that allowed residents to have a permit for a gun at home but barred them from transporting the gun elsewhere except to seven shooting ranges inside the city. Nina Totenberg
What To Expect From The Impeachment Inquiry Going Forward NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Daniel Freeman, former parliamentarian to the House Judiciary Committee, about the procedures surrounding impeachment and what to expect going forward.
Supreme Court Hears Arguments On What Could Be Landmark 2nd Amendment Case The Supreme Court heard arguments on Monday in what could be a landmark Second Amendment case. It's the first gun case taken up by the court in nearly a decade. Nina Totenberg
South Carolina Magistrate Judges Don't Need Law Degrees To Handle Lower-Level Cases NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Joseph Cranney of the Post and Courier about South Carolina's magistrate judges, a position that does not require a law degree and has become a source of corruption.