| Bolton said to be willing to defy White House and testify if court clears way; Judge orders Trump to pay $2 million to charities over misuse of foundation ; Trump boasts that his landmark law is freeing these inmates. His Justice Department wants them in prison.; How Mexico's cartel wars shattered American Mormons' peaceful but wary existence; The future of a drug company blamed for helping fuel the opioid crisis; Walgreens handled nearly 1 in 5 of the most addictive opioids at height of crisis ; Uber employees can finally sell their stock. They won't be as rich as they hoped.; Buttigieg's campaign says it doesn't think homophobia is why he can't get a foothold with black voters; Top EPA official, watchdog engaged in a standoff that inspector general calls a 'flagrant problem'; Juul halts sales of mint-flavored e-cigarettes, its most popular product |
| | | | | | | The day's most important stories, curated by Post editors. | | | | | | | | | | (Jabin Botsford/The Post) | | | In the transcript of his closed-door deposition, George Kent, the deputy assistant secretary of state responsible for Ukraine, criticized Rudolph W. Giuliani, President Trump's personal lawyer, for his comments about Marie Yovanovitch, the former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine. | | IMPEACHMENT INQUIRY | LIVE UPDATES ● By John Wagner, Colby Itkowitz and Felicia Sonmez ● Read more » | | | | | Former national security adviser John Bolton is expected to confirm his deep alarm about the Ukraine pressure campaign, people familiar with his views said. | | By Carol Leonnig and Tom Hamburger ● Read more » | | | | | The settlement brings to an end a lawsuit filed last year by the New York State Attorney General's Office that alleged "persistently illegal conduct" at the Donald J. Trump Foundation. | | By David Fahrenthold and Josh Partlow ● Read more » | | | | | A rift has emerged between White House allies who worked to pass the First Step Act and the Justice Department officials now attempting to limit the number of inmates who benefit from it. | | By Neena Satija, Wesley Lowery and Josh Dawsey ● Read more » | | | | | Residents of La Mora, who had avoided trouble with a local drug gang, say that their relatives may have been killed by traffickers from a neighboring state. | | By Kevin Sieff ● Read more » | | | | | | | | Chris Rowland explains why one of the companies accused of fueling the opioid epidemic is declaring bankruptcy. Griff Witte looks at why Republican legislators feel they can't stray from Trump. And Ellen Nakashima discusses Saudi Arabia's Twitter spies. | | Post Reports | Listen Now ● By The Washington Post ● Read more » | | | | | The company acted as its own distributor and, according to a lawsuit, failed to report suspicious orders of pain pills and prevent diversion to the black market. | | The Opioid Files ● By Jenn Abelson, Aaron Williams, Andrew Ba Tran and Meryl Kornfield ● Read more » | | | | | The recent underwhelming stock market debuts of highly valued tech start-ups have been a rude awakening for some employees, who have fewer protections than investors and fewer options to cash out their shares. | | By Nitasha Tiku and Faiz Siddiqui ● Read more » | | | | | The Democratic primary candidate is struggling with black voters, and now he's getting pushback about a leaked study of why. | | The Fix | Analysis ● By Eugene Scott ● Read more » | | | | | | | | The inspector general said chief of staff Ryan Jackson is refusing to cooperate with a probe of his efforts to influence a scientist ahead of her congressional testimony. | | By Juliet Eilperin ● Read more » | | | | | The move comes ahead of an expected White House ban on flavored e-cigarettes except for menthol and tobacco. | | By Laurie McGinley ● Read more » | | | | | | | | | |
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