The Democracy Fund + UCLA Nationscape Project with USA TODAY found some misinformation about the coronavirus is more widespread that you might think.
Author: Joey Garrison, USA TODAY
College admissions scandal: Ex-UCLA soccer coach pleads guilty to taking $200K in bribes
Jorge Salcedo, head soccer coach at UCLA from 2004 to 2019, will become the 33rd parent to plead guilty in the college admissions scandal.
Will your favorite restaurant reopen? More coronavirus relief sought for survival
Only 1 out of 5 independent restaurants are certain they can sustain their businesses amid the COVID-19 outbreak until normal operations can resume.
Judge calls alleged investigator misconduct in Lori Loughlin case ‘serious and disturbing’
A federal judge called allegations of law enforcement misconduct in the college admissions scandal “serious and disturbing.”
Lori Loughlin, other parents argue college admissions case doesn’t belong in Massachusetts
Attorneys for 14 parents including actress Lori Loughlin moved to have federal charges in the nation’s college admissions scandal dismissed.
College admissions scandal: Mom gets 7 months in prison despite her COVID-19 health concerns
Elizabeth Henriquez was sentenced via video to 7 months in prison for paying more than $500,000 in bribes to help get her daughters into top colleges.
Lori Loughlin, other parents seek college admissions case dismissal over ‘extraordinary misconduct’
Attorneys for Lori Loughlin and 13 parents say prosecutors committed ‘extraordinary misconduct’ in their handling of crucial evidence.
Mike Bloomberg pumped nearly $1B into his losing presidential run
All those television ads, staffers and consultants sure added up for Mike Bloomberg – to the tune of at least $936 million.
Joe Biden commits to woman running mate; Bernie Sanders says ‘in all likelihood’ he will, too
“My administration will look like the country and I commit that I will in fact pick a woman to be vice president,” the former vice president, said.
Former Canadian Football League player pleads guilty to $200K in bribes in college admissions scandal
Canadian businessman David Sidoo pleaded guilty to paying $200,000 to have someone secretly take the SAT exam for two sons.