Every minute, about $1.5 million in goods cross the U.S.-Mexico border. Trucks loaded with strawberries, Corona Light and washing machines chug north from Mexico. Going south are U.S. corn and spark ...
A six-story condominium featuring 12 spacious, resort-style homes passed its final approval and can now move ahead with ...
Mexico's economy shrank more than expected in the fourth quarter on a sequential basis, preliminary data from national ...
The Mexican government is rushing to raise tent cities for migrants deported from the U.S. Thousands of non-Mexicans now stranded in the country are overwhelming immigration officials as migrants ...
After US President Donald Trump dashed her hopes of gaining asylum in the United States, Arianne Dominguez joined hundreds of ...
Fears of “chemtrails,” a long-disproven idea that condensation trails — or contrails — from planes contain ...
In Mexico City, some migrants have built tent cities and slept on the streets. In a country long sympathetic to migrants, ...
President Donald Trump, who returned to office Jan. 20, has wasted no time setting a new agenda, relying on false and ...
The Ohio State Buckeyes were flirting with the No. 1 spot in college football rankings throughout much of the season but ...
During his inaugural address, President Trump said that one of his first executive orders will rename the Gulf of Mexico.
After disasters like the wildfires in Los Angeles happen, much of the rebuilding work is done by Latino immigrant workers, many in the country illegally.
MOBILE, Ala. (WALA) - A former University of Mobile student and Birmingham native lived through Hurricane Katrina as it pummeled the Gulf Coast. Now, she’s living through the Los Angeles wildfires.