Monday, April 23 2018 2:12 PM EDT2018-04-23 18:12:55 GMT
Monday, April 23 2018 4:11 PM EDT2018-04-23 20:11:49 GMT
Travis Reinking was arrested in a wooded area in Nashville, one day after killing four people and injuring four others at a Waffle House. (Source: NASHVILLE POLICE/TWITTER)
BREAKING: Murder suspect Travis Reinking is in custody and was arrested in a wooded area, according to Nashville police.
Wednesday, April 18 2018 5:33 AM EDT2018-04-18 09:33:47 GMT
Sunday, April 22 2018 5:49 AM EDT2018-04-22 09:49:50 GMT
(AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File). FILE - In this May 16, 2012, file photo, the Facebook logo is displayed on an iPad in Philadelphia. A propaganda expert who has studied Cambridge Analytica says the company helped Donald Trump’s presidential campaign use f...
Facebook is introducing more privacy safeguards to users in Europe to comply with new rules meant to make it easier for consumers to give and withdraw consent for the use of their data.More >>
Facebook is introducing more privacy safeguards to users in Europe to comply with new rules meant to make it easier for consumers to give and withdraw consent for the use of their data.More >>
SOUTH BARRINGTON, Ill. (AP) — The Chicago-area founder of one of the nation's largest evangelical churches is stepping down following allegations he behaved inappropriately with female congregants.
The Rev. Bill Hybels announced his retirement at a meeting Tuesday with members of the Willow Creek Community Church.
The 66-year-old Hybels told congregants that the allegations against him are "hindering our elders and church staff," and insisted he had been accused of things he "simply did not do." A church inquiry cleared him.
The Chicago Tribune reported last month that the allegations against Hybels, including lewd comments and unwanted touching of women, stretch back to the 1990s.
He had initially planned to retire in October.
The church that he started in Palatine, Illinois, in 1975, now has eight Chicago-area locations. Leaders say it draws 25,000 people each week.