After the presidential election, racist texts referencing "slave catchers" and "picking cotton" have prompted investigations across the U.S.
With Donald Trump in the White House and Republicans controlling the Senate, an increase in book bans is a serious threat.
Federal and state authorities are working to find the origins of racist text messages sent to Black people across the country ...
The Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree arrived in New York City on Saturday, signaling the start of the holiday season in the ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. — New York Attorney General Letitia James called racist text ... been "selected to pick cotton at [their] nearest plantation," or "chosen to be a slave." The Associated Press said ...
The FBI and state law enforcement are working to find the source of messages targeting Black people sent the day after the ...
Several federal and state agencies are investigating how racist mass texts were sent to Black people across the country in ...
In August 1781, General George Washington was monitoring British activity in New York City when he learned that the French ...
New York City can't use an unconstitutional, two-century-old “anti-pauper” law to block the state of Texas from offering ...
One day after the presidential election, and in the days following, Black people across the country, reportedly as young as ...