The U.S. Department of Justice on Tuesday closed a probe prompted by the April 2015 death of Freddie Gray. It concluded Baltimore police officers regularly violate the constitutional rights of Black residents through the use of excessive force, unlawful searches and arrests, and racial discrimination.

On the second anniversary of the teen's tragic death, has the lesson that Black lives matter really been heard or has it fallen on deaf ears?

Detective Gordon's comments, initially reported last month shortly after the shootings of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile, marked the simmering tension between the Black community and law enforcement over police interactions.

A Virginia jury convicted a former police officer of fatally shooting an unarmed Black teenager. The prosecutor said he should have used non-lethal force instead of a gun.

Plus, Melania Trump may have lied about her visa status in the '90s and President Obama announces largest set of clemency grants in over a century.

More than 60 organizations associated with the movement mapped out what it will really take to achieve Black liberation and equality.

Officer Michael Kelley finally speaks up on the facts that prosecutors wanted him to hide.

San Mateo's Noah White Winchester was charged with 22 counts and is being held on $3.1 million bail.

Plus, a 9-year-old Black girl is the smartest person in the Marvel Universe and Pokemon Go honors Tamir Rice in a special way.

A second video shows a police officer making racist remarks to Breaion King as he drove her to jail.

The charges sound foolish, but do they sound familiar? Ramsey Orta was also arrested after filming Eric Garner's death.

  A Black Cincinnati police officer is under investigation by his department for a Facebook post that essentially delivers what is commonly known in the Black community as “the talk.” In the since-deleted post, officer Freddie Vincent urged friends and family to comply with the demands of White officers if stopped “because they are looking for a […]