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78 Stories on U.S. Department of Justice
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White House eyes moving site of 9/11 trial

The Justice Department remained tightlipped Friday as criticism mounted over the decision to hold the the September 11 terrorist attack trial in a civilian court in lower Manhattan.

Arkansas man pleads guilty to threatening to kill Obama

An Arkansas man has pleaded guilty to plotting to kill several African-Americans in 2008, including then-presidential candidate Barack Obama, the Justice Department announced Thursday.

Survey: More than 1 in 10 youth inmates say they were sexually abused

More than one in 10 juvenile detainees in major U.S. facilities say they experienced some form of sexual abuse or sexual victimization while in detention, according to a report Thursday by the Department of Justice.

Official: Violence to some groups of women 'shocking'

Fifteen years after passage of the Violence Against Women Act to combat physical abuse of women and girls, domestic violence remains especially acute among Native American and Alaska Native women, Justice officials said Monday.

Fortune: Where are the subprime perp walks?

Where are the perp walks for the subprime mortgage executives that dragged us into this mess?

Sex-tourism operation nets three, Justice Department says

Three men charged with sexually exploiting Cambodian children are being brought back to the United States to face prosecution, the Justice Department announced Monday.

Report: Domestic surveillance program relied on flawed analysis

The highly controversial no-warrant surveillance program initiated after the September 11 terrorist attacks relied on a "factually flawed" legal analysis inappropriately provided by a single Justice Department official, according to a report to Congress on Friday.

19 charged in dogfighting ring

An investigation into dogfighting across five states has resulted in federal charges against 19 people, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Wednesday.

CNNMoney: U.S. probes Google, Apple on hiring

The U.S. Justice Department is investigating the hiring practices of some major players in the tech industry in the latest sign that the Obama administration is getting serious about its antitrust crackdown promises.

U.S. vows to keep using 'state secrets' defense

The Obama administration has informed a federal judge it will continue to invoke the "state secrets" privilege in a legal battle with an Islamic charity suspected of funding terrorism.

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