U.K. leader and fiancee welcome baby boy amid coronavirus crisis
Johnson, who has just returned to work after recovering from COVID-19 himself, was reportedly present at the birth.
Johnson, who has just returned to work after recovering from COVID-19 himself, was reportedly present at the birth.
Andrea Circle Bear is the 29th federal inmate to die in the Bureau of Prisons custody since late March
The lawsuit, filed on behalf of a U.S. citizen, argues that denying the $1,200 payments is a form of discrimination.
"The aerial phenomena observed in the videos remain characterized as 'unidentified,'" a spokeswoman said.
Global health experts fear naysayers' misinformation could hinder efforts to stop the coronavirus once a vaccine is developed
More state and city leaders are gambling to ease restrictions aimed at curbing COVID-19, in spite of warnings that doing so too soon could bring new waves of disease.
The death toll has climbed to more than 58,000 nationwide as some businesses reopen.
Veteran character actor was one of Bollywood's best-known exports to Hollywood.
U.S. surpasses 1 million coronavirus cases; Photographer takes senior photos for high school students
The U.S. Air Force's Thunderbirds and Navy's Blue Angels conducted flyovers in New York City and other cities in the Northeast on Tuesday to salute to frontline workers fighting the coronavirus pandemic. CBSN's Vanessa Murdoch reports.
Her legal team says she's still scheduled to attend a Friday hearing.
President Trump said Tuesday that he plans to use the Defense Production Act to compel meat processing plants to stay open during the coronavirus pandemic. The news comes as the number of cases in the U.S. topped 1 million. Reuters White House correspondent Jeff Mason discusses the president's decision and the rest of the day's political headlines.
The decision to remove Yang from the ballot, Yang's lawsuit alleges, will result in "disenfranchising hundreds of persons" and "suppressing voter turnout" to the detriment of down ballot candidates.
Ohio's in-person primary was delayed hours before polls were set to open last month.
Ohio was originally scheduled to vote on March 17.
President and CEO of the ONE Campaign and former ambassador to USAID Gayle Smith says this pandemic "strikes the hardest at people who have the fewest things to fall back on."
The president on Tuesday said the deadly coronavirus is "going to go away," but the U.S. will be prepared in fall if it returns in another form.
Leaders of food banks and distribution centers say resources are limited as they face the highest demand in decades. They say the global pandemic has triggered a crisis of food insecurity, straining community lifelines.
Ohio tallied votes Tuesday for its first vote-by-mail presidential primary. The election was delayed just hours before polls had been set to open last month. CBS News political reporter Grace Segers joined CBSN to discuss.
The world lost a frontline soldier in the battle against COVID-19 when a 49-year-old hospital medical director took her own life over the weekend.
Ariel Roman was shot twice in February after officers tried to stop him for violating a city ordinance by walking between subway cars. The additional footage was released months later part of the investigation.
A Politico article reports some of President Trump's allies are now concerned that he is damaging his reelection prospects with his daily White House briefings. Gabby Orr, the co-author of that piece, joins CBSN to discuss some of the worries by top Trump aides.
The executive order also applies to plants that have already closed, which will have to re-open with healthy workers.
In the global race to find a vaccine, Oxford University just jumped way ahead of the pack.
For America's nearly four million high school seniors, the end of this school year is not what they imagined would be. But as Chip Reid reports, one photographer is making sure some members of the class of 2020 are not forgotten.