-
Bills in the state House would allow roadside testing for drugs to aid law enforcement in determining driver impairment. The bipartisan bills have passed a committee.
-
Thousands of peonies were found vandalized and cut at the Matthaei Botanical Gardens and Nichols Arboretum in Ann Arbor.
-
Attorneys made their closing arguments on Monday, day six of the trial.
-
The city councils for Farmington and Southfield are expected to vote on whether to join a regional deer cull started by Farmington Hills to control overpopulation.
-
Christopher Schurr took the stand in his own defense Friday morning in a Kent County courtroom. It's the first time the former Grand Rapids police officer has spoken publicly about how he shot and killed Patrick Lyoya during a traffic stop in 2022.
-
Christopher Schurr’s attorneys asked for a mistrial when the prosecution rested their case today, saying two of the witnesses testified on accepted police practices that are irrelevant to Michigan law. They also asked the judge to issue her own verdict, saying no reasonable juror could find Schurr guilty.
-
The taser and its capabilities are a key point in the defense for former GRPD officer Christopher Schurr, who is on trial for second-degree murder.
-
Jurors in a Grand Rapids courtroom heard from the first witnesses Monday in the long-awaited trial of a former police officer charged with murdering a man in 2022.
-
Former Grand Rapids police officer Christopher Schurr shot Patrick Lyoya in the back of the head following a struggle during a traffic stop in 2022. Schurr’s lawyers have been trying for years to get the second-degree murder charge thrown out. But judges have repeatedly said the case should go to a jury.
-
The United Auto Workers union is speaking out against federal job cuts at NIOSH saying the decision will harm workers, local communities, and efforts to prevent injuries and save lives.
-
What to know about assessing your risk and protecting yourself as the Trump administration ratchets up immigration enforcement.
-
Southeast Michigan law enforcement, Detroit City officials, and some Michigan lawmakers called Monday for the passage of bills to create a new public safety and violence prevention fund.