Advertisement
  • Associated Press

    Risks of handcuffing someone facedown long known; people die when police training fails to keep up

    For decades, police across the United States have been warned that the common tactic of handcuffing someone facedown could turn deadly if officers pin them on the ground with too much pressure or for too long. Recommendations first made by major departments and police associations culminated in a 1995 federal safety bulletin that explained keeping someone on their chest in what’s known as prone restraint can dangerously restrict breathing. The cases involving prone restraint are among more than 1,000 AP documented over a decade of people who died not by gunshot but after officers used force that is not meant to kill.

  • USA TODAY

    'Women are gonna hate me'

    What Michael Cohen testified Trump said in 2016.

  • Yahoo TV UK

    Piers Morgan says he interviewed Baby Reindeer's 'real' Martha for clicks

    Piers Morgan's interview with Fiona Harvey who claims to be the "real" Martha from Baby Reindeer divided viewers.