Opinion editor Matthew T. Hall explores why trolls are feeling more emboldened on social media and making Black History Month a target.
Though Charleston sits more than 500 miles from the political epicenter of Washington, D.C., it is no stranger to the ...
As a follower of Jesus Christ, who commands us to love our neighbors as ourselves, we must do whatever is in our power to resist the scapegoating and oppression of ...
US Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals blocked lawsuit by Rev Clementa Pinckney's widow because law holds social media companies ...
"Recommending that a user join a group, connect with another user, or attend an event is Facebook's own speech, for which it ...
State legislators on Wednesday elected attorney Thomas Rode, a 2008 graduate of the Charleston School of Law, to be a state ...
Jennifer Pinckney, a survivor of the racist 2015 Emanuel AME massacre on Calhoun St, will continue to seek to hold Meta ...
A federal appeals court refused to revive a lawsuit that sought to hold the company responsible for the 2015 racially motivated mass shooting by Dylann Roof.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations issued a statement Monday welcoming charges against Sean Michael-Emmrich Johnson in ...
Democratic lawmakers are adopting an aggressive new strategy in their ongoing push to add a hate crimes bill onto the books in South Carolina, and an Horry County senator could play a crucial role in ...
State Rep. Wendell Gilliard, D-Charleston, told News13 on Wednesday that a companion bill to his longstanding proposed “Clementa C. Pinckney Hate Crimes Act” was filed in the Senate in a bid ...