President Donald Trump pardoned over 1,500 people charged in the U.S. Capitol riots Jan. 6, 2021 – including some from Western North Carolina.
President Donald Trump on Friday is set to visit North Carolina — a state he said “has been abandoned by the Democrats” as it rebuilds from Hurricane Helene’s flooding — with questions about disaster relief taking center stage in his first days back in office.
Gregory Charles Peck, Jr., a Connelly Springs man charged in August, is expected to enter a plea on Thursday on a civil disorder charge and felony charges of assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers using a deadly or dangerous weapon.
President Donald Trump will visit storm-ravaged North Carolina on Friday in his first trip outside Washington since the start of his second term.
From exaggerating the size of his win to rewriting the history of his supporters' attack on the Capitol, it's been a busy week for the president.
President Donald Trump took his oath of office Monday saying that Western North Carolinians were “treated so badly” after Helene. Now he plans to visit the state in one of his first official trips.
David Paul Daniel, pleaded guilty to Capitol Hill assault charges earlier this month, but pleaded not guilty to a string of alleged child sex abuse months earlier
In the weeks leading up to President-elect Donald Trump’s return to office, at least two U.S. Capitol rioters from North Carolina have ... defendants from all 50 states have been convicted ...
David Paul Daniel, pleaded guilty to Capitol Hill assault charges earlier this month, but pleaded not guilty to a string of alleged child sex abuse months earlier
The Trump administration will temporarily stop payments on multiple federal programs Tuesday evening, cutting off Americans who rely on what could be trillions in funding and setting off
RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) – Lawmakers are back in the North Carolina State Capitol this week to begin a busy 2025 session. There’s already agreement on both sides about some priorities.
With his confirmation at stake, Pete Hegseth is working the phones ahead of a Senate vote to shore up support to become the nation’s defense secretary.