The common household item is great for treating dryness and redness of the eyes, but it’s also poisonous if swallowed.
Read MoreThe Massachusetts home where the alleged ax murderer lived for over three decades is on the market for a cool $890,000.
Read MoreHere’s why you might start hearing more Bach and Mozart in public places.
Read MoreConsidered a form of free speech, we’re one of the few countries that allows flag desecration, but not everyone is happy about it.
Read MoreThe tools that can prevent one from getting sick are now also being used for criminal activity.
Read MoreFrom 1992 to 2004, employees at restaurants across 32 states were conned into performing illegal strip-searches, among other sexual acts, by a phone caller who claimed to be “the police.”
Read MoreThe airplane-hopping senior citizen was let out due to crowding concerns at the high-occupancy Chicago jail that now has more than 300 infected inmates.
Read MoreJudges are increasingly giving defendants the option of choosing alternative punishments that are unique to the crime — and rife for embarrassment.
After a spate of shoplifting, a chain of adult stores in New Zealand has turned to Facebook to identify and track down the people who owe them money.
Read MoreThe many times people have been duped by dates more interested in committing crimes than winning their hearts.
Read MoreFrom skeletons to stuffed sleeping bags, fake passengers aren’t hard to erect, but cops are not always so easily fooled.
Read MoreA daily comic series inspired by the antics of Florida’s zaniest denizens — and the bizarre headlines they help create.
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