The man shot, Ibragim Todashev, was being questioned in Florida when he pulled a knife, NBC sources said. In earlier interviews he had been cooperative, they added.
As the search for survivors in Oklahoma City's suburbs ended, the state's medical examiner began releasing the identities of those who died in Monday's tornado.
Cub Scout Pack 215 in rural Arkansas is waiting for a vote that could mean big changes for their tiny outfit: whether or not the Boy Scouts end a policy banning gay Scouts
First Read: Lawmakers expressed both anger and bewilderment that IRS leaders had not told Congress sooner about indications that the tax agency had improperly singled out conservatives and Tea Party groups seeking tax-exempt status.
The house — with its open floor plan, large windows, heating and cooling-efficient design — remains attractive. It's on the market for only the second time in its history, currently listed for $1.8 million.
GTC: Tiger Woods said Sergio Garcia's fried chicken remark was wrong, hurtful and inappropriate.
"Girls Gone Wild" founder Joe Francis has some choice words for the jury who found him guilty of falsely imprisoning three women in his California home. They're "mentally retarded" "stupid idiots" who are "jealous" of him and should be "put in jail" or even "lined up and shot," or so Francis told The Hollywood Reporter in an interview.
Survivors of Monday’s devastating tornado in Oklahoma are coming to grips with their post-storm realities, and there’s one person who knows all too well what they are feeling. Indiana mother Stephanie Decker lost both legs in a 2012 tornado and she says they will recover.
On Tuesday at the company's campus in Redmond, Wash., Microsoft unveiled the new Xbox One console, an "all-in-one system" with controller and new Kinect sensor array.
In an era where air travel has come to feel like riding a city bus in the sky, Virgin America soared above the competition in Consumer Reports airline rankings released Wednesday. “Virgin America is a cut above the rest,” Consumer Reportssenior editor Amanda Walker told NBC News.
Thanks to dozens of Internet postings and the coordinated efforts of nonprofits, shelters and local volunteers, tornado victims are slowly but surely being reunited with their stranded four-legged loved ones.