Andrea Noble
Articles by Andrea Noble
Jeff Sessions: Secure borders, recruitment prevention key to fighting gangs
Secure borders and efforts to deter gang recruitment will be key to the Justice Department's strategy to reduce gang violence like that wrought by MS-13, Attorney General Jeff Sessions said Friday during a visit to Long Island, New York. Published April 28, 2017
Jeff Sessions lays Justice foundation in difficult 100 days
The Justice Department has had perhaps the roughest ride of any Cabinet branch during the first 100 days of the Trump administration, facing hostile judges who have blocked the president's immigration plans, the ouster of the acting attorney general and even accusations of racism leveled against Jeff Sessions during his confirmation hearing for attorney general. Published April 27, 2017
Donald Trump’s sanctuary city order ruled likely unconstitutional
A judge blocked President Trump's anti-sanctuary city executive order Tuesday, accusing the White House of wrongly trying to threaten the cities and saying Congress, not the president, gets to decide what strings to attach to federal funds. Published April 25, 2017
Mayors say DOJ has narrowed ‘sanctuary city’ label, but they seek further clarity
A delegation of mayors who met with Attorney General Jeff Sessions to discuss immigration enforcement say they came away with a better grasp of how the Justice Department will deem cities "sanctuary" jurisdictions and potentially target them for withholding of federal funds. Published April 25, 2017
Sally Yates to testify on Russia probe; date set
Former acting Attorney General Sally Yates is set to testify on May 8 on Russian efforts to influence the U.S. presidential election. Published April 25, 2017
Iranian American groups testify to detriment of Trump’s travel ban
Leaders of Iranian-American organizations testified in federal court Tuesday about the negative effects that President Trump's executive order on travel and refugees has had on their community, even as enforcement of the order has been barred. Published April 18, 2017
D.C. appeals court weighs legality of Stingray cellphone tracking technology
A panel of judges from the D.C. Court of Appeals grappled Tuesday with the boundaries of privacy expectations in a case in which D.C. police tracked the location of robbery and sexual assault suspect using warrantless cellphone surveillance -- questioning whether the fact the man was carrying stolen cellphones or found on a public street diminished his privacy rights. Published April 18, 2017
Stingray cellphone tracking at center of D.C. police court case
Civil liberties advocates and federal prosecutors will face off Tuesday in the D.C. Court of Appeals over the city police department's warrantless use of secret cellphone tracking technology to locate a sexual assault suspect. Published April 17, 2017
Justice Dept. drops North Carolina ‘bathroom bill’ suit after HB2 repeal
The Justice Department on Friday dropped its lawsuit accusing North Carolina of discrimination against transgender people following the state's repeal of its "bathroom bill." Published April 14, 2017
3 brothers charged with running drug trafficking ring
Stash houses rented by friends. Cars with hidden compartments to hold drugs. Stolen identities used to make fake IDs. Published April 13, 2017
Detroit doctor accused of female genital mutilation procedures
A Detroit emergency room physician was charged in federal court Thursday with performing female genital mutilations in what is thought to be the first case of its kind in the U.S., and authorities suspect she may have been part of a multistate ring. Published April 13, 2017
Jeff Sessions urged to clean out Obama staff from Civil Rights Division
Conservative scholars have urged Attorney General Jeff Sessions to purge "ideological rot" that's festered in the department's Civil Rights Division under the Obama administration through internal reforms meant to reverse partisanship in the agency. Published April 12, 2017
Justice Dept. to end ‘catch and release’ immigration policy
Attorney General Jeff Sessions declared "a new era" in immigration enforcement on Tuesday, saying his prosecutors will try to bring stiffer criminal charges against repeat illegal immigrants and smugglers as part of President Trump's crackdown. Published April 11, 2017
Maryland ‘sanctuary state’ bill pulled
A proposal to turn Maryland into a "sanctuary state" by limiting local law enforcement cooperation with federal immigration authorities died in the State House on Monday after lawmakers withdrew the bill -- which had garnered a veto threat from the governor and a rebuke from Trump administration Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Published April 10, 2017
Shooting at elementary school in San Bernardino
Two adults and an 8-year-old are dead after a husband opened fire on his wife inside a San Bernardino, California, elementary school Monday morning. The shooter, who had a history of domestic violence, turned the gun on himself after killing his wife, a teacher, and hitting two students standing behind her, one fatally. Published April 10, 2017
Raymond Myles, Illinois judge, shot dead outside his Chicago home
An Illinois judge was killed and a woman injured in a shooting outside the judge's South Side Chicago home early Monday. Published April 10, 2017
Consent decree to reform Baltimore Police Department approved
A federal judge on Friday approved a proposed consent decree to reform the Baltimore Police Department — sidelining the Trump Justice Department, which had sought to delay court approval of an agreement brokered by the Obama administration. Published April 9, 2017
Democrats push to link Syria strike, refugee ban
Democrats are attempting to use President Trump's decision to retaliate against the Syrian government's gas attack on its own people to rally political opposition against his executive order temporarily barring refugees from the United States. Published April 7, 2017
Judge approves Baltimore consent decree outlining police reform
A federal judge on Friday approved a proposed consent decree to reform the Baltimore Police Department, sidelining the Trump administration's Justice Department, which had sought to delay court approval of an agreement brokered by a prior administration. Published April 7, 2017
Twitter sues DHS to protect ID of user behind anti-Trump account
The Department of Homeland Security sought to compel Twitter to reveal the identity of the person behind an account that was among the dozens of so-called "rogue" handles created to criticize the Trump administration, the social media company alleged in a lawsuit filed Thursday. Published April 6, 2017