“I deeply regret my actions and I apologize to the court,” Fruman said during a hearing Friday in federal court in Manhattan.
Author: Kristine Phillips, USA TODAY
Biden administration blames China for Microsoft hacking as DOJ indicts Chinese nationals in cyberattacks
Biden administration, along with Britain and EU, catalog a broad range of other cyberthreats from Beijing.
Giuliani suspended from practicing law in New York over false claims made working for Trump
The New York Supreme Court said there is “uncontroverted” evidence that Rudy Giuliani made “demonstrably false” statements to the courts and public.
FBI secretly ran phone encryption program used by organized crime, global sting yields 800 arrests
Over the past 18 months, the FBI provided phones via unsuspecting middlemen to more than 300 gangs operating in more than 100 countries.
Biden Justice Department says Trump acted in official capacity when he denied rape allegations
President Joe Biden has previously accused Trump of using the Justice Department to advance his personal and political interests.
Justice Department withdraws FBI subpoena for USA TODAY records ID’ing readers
The subpoena was issued as part of a criminal investigation seeking to identify a child sex offender.
USA TODAY fights FBI subpoena demanding records that would identify readers of Florida shooting story
Gannett, USA TODAY’s parent company, is fighting the FBI’s subpoena, calling it a First Amendment violation.
Kristen Clarke narrowly confirmed as first Black woman to lead Justice Department’s civil rights division
Senate voted 51-48 to confirm Kristen Clarke, with Sen. Collins as the lone Republican to support her as leader of the DOJ civil rights division.
Ahmaud Arbery murder suspects charged with hate crimes by Justice Department
Federal prosecutors said Travis McMichael, Gregory McMichael and William Bryan targeted and threatened Arbery because of his race.
Tamir Rice’s family asks Justice Department to reopen investigation into 12-year-old’s death
The family of 12-year-old Tamir RiceĀ is asking the Justice Department to reopen its investigation into the Cleveland boy’s 2014 shooting by police.