Latest Oklahoma Headlines
Two national Indigenous organizations are reminding tribal citizens how to assert their rights during encounters with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents amid growing ICE presence across Indian Country and Oklahoma.
The Latest from NPR News
-
The Department of Justice and FBI are ceding their traditional role leading investigations in the wake of shootings in Minneapolis to the Department of Homeland Security.
-
Destin Conrad went from teen social media star to a musician touring the world on some of its biggest stages. In 2025, he put out both an R&B and jazz album and earned his first Grammy nomination.
-
A year after the midair collision near Washington, D.C., families of the victims are pushing for action on aviation safety, including crash-avoidance technology. And they're digging in for a fight.
-
Restaurants in Minneapolis have shifted their business strategies -- and their missions -- around the federal immigration push in the Twin Cities region.
More Oklahoma News
-
On the Scene w/Brett Fieldcamp, Jan. 29, 2026
-
The agency presented its budget request to the House Appropriations and Budget Committee Wednesday.
-
Oklahoma City Democratic Rep. Ajay Pittman announced her resignation from her elected position as a state lawmaker after pleading guilty to forgery charges Wednesday. The announcement comes after months of investigations and court proceedings.
-
USA Rare Earth, which has its manufacturing facility in Stillwater, plans to extract rare earth minerals and supply materials for various technologies.
More from NPR
-
New research looks at the long-term impact of a controversial federal program from the 1990s that demolished housing projects and replaced them with mixed-income developments.
-
VA secretary Doug Collins is appearing before senators to explain plans to overhaul the department. But some of the focus of the hearing was also on his comments about the killing of Alex Preeti.
-
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with Edwin Torres DeSantiago, who conducts trainings for constitutional observation of immigration enforcement.
-
The crossover hits stacking Grammy nods this year have little in common with the culture that birthed them — but they're winning the chart game.
-
The departures include Kevin Couch, who was announced as the Kennedy Center's senior vice president of artistic planning less than two weeks ago.
-
Federal officials have a plan that could curb billions of dollars in overpayments to Medicare Advantage plans. But will they follow through on it?