Louisiana man serving life sentence for $20 marijuana charge released
Fate Winslow is now with his family, and ready "to enjoy his life."
Fate Winslow is now with his family, and ready "to enjoy his life."
A school custodian was in need of kidney transplant. Taking her father's advice, a teacher donated hers. Chip Reid shares the good news in our holiday series "Season of Giving."
Here's a look at the top stories making headlines on the "CBS Evening News with Norah O'Donnell."
A Food and Drug Administration advisory panel voted to recommend Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use authorization on Thursday. Meanwhile the rollout of Pfizer's vaccine to frontline health care workers continues. Columbia University professor of epidemiology and medicine Dr. Wafaa El-Sadr joins CBSN's "Red & Blue" anchor Elaine Quijano with more on what the safety data shows.
A deadly winter storm struck the Northeast and wreaked havoc in areas still battling the coronavirus pandemic. Mola Lenghi reports.
As congressional leaders near a relief deal, lawmakers admit they left Americans hanging for too long. Nancy Cordes has the latest.
You can see more of Stephen Colbert's interview with President-elect Joe Biden and Dr. Jill Biden on "The Late Show" on CBS.
A second coronavirus vaccine could begin shipping this weekend that will provide millions of additional doses to Americans. This comes as the U.S. sets another deadly record as the pandemic surges. Jonathan Vigliotti reports.
Vials of Pfizer's COVID vaccine were found to contain an extra dose as a second vaccine is on its way to approval. Errol Barnett has more.
Hackers linked to Russian intelligence are feared to be deep inside sensitive infrastructure networks in the U.S. Catherine Herridge reports.
A teacher donated her kidney to a custodian after seeing via Facebook that he needed a transplant.
Some major cities received more snow than they've had in years.
Democrats had high hopes of defeating Senator Susan Collins in Maine, but she won a solid victory for reelection. Nathan Bernard, a reporter at the worker-owned magazine Mainer, joins CBSN's "Red & Blue" host Elaine Quijano to discuss how an endorsement from the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee may have doomed challenger Sarah Gideon's campaign from the start.
Thirty-five states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and Guam say search giant illegally squashed competition.
Members of an FDA advisory panel voted 20-0 to recommend Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use. The FDA could authorize it within days, along with the Pfizer vaccine that health care workers started receiving this week. CBS New York's Dr. Max Gomez answers some common questions about the new vaccines on CBSN NY.
Like other popular investments in times of uncertainty, such as gold, bitcoin has benefited from the pandemic.
Sean Gibson told CBS News it helps his campaign to rename baseball's MVP trophy after his great grandfather – and replace the commissioner who kept him out of the major leagues.
Their youngest, Prince Louis, appears to have been caught mid-laugh in the cute shot.
Although some people may be exempt, most workers could be required to get a shot, according to federal agency.
A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the #1 Sunday morning news program
President-elect Joe Biden could receive the COVID-19 vaccine as early as next week. This comes as Vice President Mike Pence and his wife prepare to get vaccinated Friday in a public event. CBS News political contributor Sean Sullivan joins CBSN with more.
A deadly winter storm is slamming the East Coast with snow, wind and even flood warnings. Mola Lenghi reports from Suffern, New York.
Dr. Grant Colfax, San Francisco's director of public health, said on Thursday that the region's COVID-19 cases remain at a dangerous level and there continues to be a shortage of ICU hospital beds. He urged residents to protect their loved ones and their neighbors. Watch his remarks.
Vice President Mike Pence is in Georgia again today, rallying support for Republican candidates in the two Senate runoff elections. CBSN political reporter Caitlin Huey-Burns joins CBSN from one of the rallies in Columbus, Georgia.
A recent article in The Atlantic looks at how state and federal leaders have continued to give conflicting guidance to the American public about the spread of the coronavirus. The author of that article, Derek Thompson, joins CBSN's Tanya Rivero to discuss his reporting.