The U.S. Senate sent President Donald Trump a bill last week that would protect a portion of the Wounded Knee Massacre site on the Pine Ridge Reservation.
The Australian authorities said the 24-year-old man, who had been shot by the police, woke from a coma on Tuesday afternoon.
The bill’s passage comes a little more than two months after U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth announced his rejection ...
Reuters has pieced together the moments when the Hanukkah turned from celebration to fear through interviews with more than a ...
The Wounded Knee Massacre Memorial and Sacred Site Act unanimously passed the Senate on Thursday, sending the bill to President Donald Trump’s desk for signature. The act of legislation would ...
Republican U.S. Sen. Mike Rounds stopped by the KELOLAND News studio for a live interview Friday afternoon.   Rounds spoke ...
The Wounded Knee Massacre Memorial and Sacred Site Act, sponsored by Sen. Mike Rounds and Rep. Dusty Johnson of South Dakota, passed the Senate unanimously Thursday after the House approved it earlier ...
The “Wounded Knee Massacre Memorial and Sacred Site Act” will place 40 acres of land at the site of the massacre into ...
The Wounded Knee Sacred Site and Memorial Act, introduced by U.S. Representative Dusty Johnson (R-S.D.), passed the United ...
Federal legislation designating 40 acres at the Wounded Knee massacre site solely for historic purposes is headed to U.S. President Donald Trump for his signature. The ...
It wasn’t until the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 that shooting the wounded became a war crime. The 1907 version explicitly declared that it is forbidden “to kill or wound an enemy who, having ...