The hunt for evidence of Sasquatch became the unexpected focus of a court case in British Columbia recently.
New details have emerged this week courtesy of Donald Trump's new press secretary Karoline Leavitt.
A rather unusual court case has recently raised questions about whether or not animals have the same rights as people.
Morgan Geyser, now 22, stabbed her classmate Payton Leutner in 2014 in an attempt to please a fictional entity.
In New Zealand, Indigenous leaders recently signed a remarkable new treaty to recognize whales as legal 'persons'.
Recent renovation works have seemingly stirred up paranormal phenomena at the St Landry Parish courthouse.
The most recent Loch Ness Monster sighting of the year comes courtesy of Sash Lake from Wiltshire, England.
With some judges using ChatGPT to help make decisions, should artificial intelligence really be used in court cases ?
Kristina Desgres and Rodrigo Velasquez have been battling the courts in a bid to give their baby the rather unusual name.
A trove of documents, photographs and records pertaining to the FBI's search for a lost gold horde has been published.
The iconic UFO incident is set to become a movie courtesy of Netflix and the Obamas' production company.
An elephant named 'Happy' has been the subject of a legal battle to have her released back into the wild.
The five-member Trapp family from Esko has a combined height equal to the length of half a tennis court.
The claim, which has been heavily refuted, comes courtesy of a prominent Egyptian tourism official.
A man has been cleared of assaulting his ex-partner who had been allegedly possessed by 'demonic forces'.
When Francis Smith pulled the trigger on a ghost in 1804, it sparked one of the UK's strangest court cases.
A court dealing with a case against an anti-hangover drinks company has ruled that hangovers are an 'illness'.
69-year-old Emile Ratelband has taken his local authority to court in an effort to have his age legally changed to 49.
Controversial Bigfoot expert Todd Standing has taken the government of British Columbia to court.
A Romanian court has formally rejected Constantin Reliu's claim that he is actually very much alive.