'A Day Of Power And Strength': Epstein's Accusers Get Their Day In Court The financier's suicide in jail appeared to rob his accusers — again — of their chance to denounce him publicly. On Tuesday, they're getting a chance to tell their stories in the courtroom anyway. Colin Dwyer
Oklahoma Is Successful In Its Suit Against Opioid Manufacturer An Oklahoma judge has ordered Johnson & Johnson to pay $572 million to help cover the treatment, overdose prevention and other costs of abating the opioid epidemic in the state. Jackie Fortier
Washington state, along with 19 others, sues Trump Administration over detaining migrant children The states are taking legal action to prevent the Trump administration from dropping out of an agreement on how long it can hold children in federal facilities and under what standards. Richard Gonzales
Law Professor On California's New Police Use-Of-Force Law NPR's Michel Martin speaks with law professor Seth Stoughton about California's new law restricting law enforcement's use of deadly force.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg Treated Again For Cancer The 86-year-old justice just wrapped up weeks of treatment after a new cancerous tumor was found on her pancreas. Doctors say there's no evidence of cancer elsewhere. Nina Totenberg
Phone Companies Ink Deal With All 50 States And D.C. To Combat Robocalls In the plan, service providers will provide technology to combat a practice known as spoofing to aid state attorneys general in locating and prosecuting the fraudulent robocallers. Brakkton Booker
Police Seize Rifles, High-Capacity Magazines From Man Wanting To 'Shoot Up' Workplace Authorities say Rodolfo Montoya, 37, told a co-worker at the Long Beach Marriott that he was planning a mass shooting there. Bobby Allyn
In Vermont, A Case Of One Man Whose Gun Was Seized Under Red Flag Law While the political focus may be on mass shootings, states are far more often using red flag laws to prevent cases of individual gun violence, including suicide. Melissa Block
What's Changed Since Kathleen Hawk Sawyer Last Headed Prison Bureau? It's been 16 years since Kathleen Hawk Sawyer was in charge of the federal Bureau of Prisons. On big change is that the prison population has jumped from 65,000 in 1992 to 177,000 in 2019. Ryan Lucas
Teen Gets Life Sentence For Killing Police Officer In Baltimore County Dawnta Harris was 16 when the stolen Jeep he was driving ran over Officer Amy Caprio, 29, in the spring of 2018. Harris will be able to seek parole. Bill Chappell