Constitutional law professor discusses exemption of tech companies from TikTok ban NPR speaks with Zachary Price, law professor at the University of California College of Law San Francisco, about the Trump administration's rationale for exempting tech companies from the TikTok ban. Leila Fadel
Court holds Florida Attorney General in contempt over illegal immigration law Florida's attorney general has gone to the U.S. Supreme Court asking permission to enforce the state's new law against illegal immigration. A judge has found him in contempt and some have been arrested under the law even as it's blocked in court. Regan McCarthy
Supreme Court to decide if states can ban transgender girls in sports The Supreme Court has agreed to hear two cases in the fall that test state laws banning transgender women and girls from participating in sports at publicly funded institutions. Nina Totenberg
How GOP lawmakers pulled off the megabill — and what it means for the American people The House of Representatives has passed the One Big Beautiful Bill. The package extends existing temporary tax cuts, makes cuts to Medicaid and adds spending on border security and defense. Deirdre Walsh
Ghost guns may make a comeback, despite a Supreme Court ruling The Supreme Court upheld federal restrictions on the kit guns in March, but gun rights groups hope the Trump administration -- or the courts -- will still roll them back. Martin Kaste
Legal fight over 'ghost guns' heating up again In March, the Supreme Court upheld Biden-era restrictions on build-it-yourself gun kits. But gun rights groups are still hoping the regulation will be swept away. Martin Kaste
Manuel Ellis' family gets $6 million in wrongful death settlement with city of Tacoma More than five years after Manuel "Manny" Ellis was killed during a police encounter on his way home from a Tacoma convenience store, the city will pay his family $6 million to settle a wrongful death lawsuit KUOW Staff
Bryan Kohberger pleads guilty to murder in stabbings of 4 Idaho students to avoid death penalty Bryan Kohberger pleaded guilty to murder Wednesday in the brutal stabbing deaths of four University of Idaho students in 2022 that stunned and terrified the campus and set off a nationwide search, which ended weeks later when he was arrested in Pennsylvania. Associated Press
How Trump's immigration crackdown is sweeping up longtime residents and workers Jacob Soboroff of NBC News says the Trump administration promised to deport the "worst of the worst" criminal immigrants, but is now detaining undocumented workers with no serious criminal record. Tonya Mosley
Sean Combs found guilty on two counts, but acquitted on most serious charges Combs was found guilty of two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution, but the jury found him not guilty on the more serious charges of racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking. Anastasia Tsioulcas