Texas Cops Fired for 'Inappropriate' Sexual Contact With Massage Workers
As a result of the internal affairs investigation, three Lewisville officers were fired, one was demoted, and seven were suspended without pay.
As a result of the internal affairs investigation, three Lewisville officers were fired, one was demoted, and seven were suspended without pay.
This company made a product to serve victims who don't want to go to police right after a sexual assault. Some politicians want to ban it.
First-place finishes include an investigative piece on egregious misconduct in federal prison, a documentary on homelessness, best magazine columnist, and more.
The victims received no restitution payment.
The defamation lawsuit is the latest in Trump's campaign of lawfare against media outlets, but all of those suits have failed so far.
"A lot of people on the registry are on there for consensual behavior, things I think many people agree shouldn’t be crimes," says Meaghan Ybos, the president of Women Against Registry.
With journalistic standards like these...
"I knew they were scumbags," a former Bureau of Prisons officer tells Reason.
It is not hard to see why the jury concluded that the incident she described probably happened.
Plus: Lack of independence could cause childhood mental health issues, Biden follows Trump playbook on TikTok, and more...
Plus: States move to stop cops from lying to kids, Biden wants to raise Medicare taxes, and more...
Prison staff were fired in less than half of substantiated incidents of sexual misconduct between 2016 and 2018, and only faced legal consequences in 6 percent of cases.
Long delays and management failures "allowed serious, repeated sexual abuse in at least four facilities to go undetected."
The movement's net caught a lot of men like writer Junot Diaz—ordinary jerks rather than formidable serial predators.
Plus: International attitudes about Russia and China, court rules against book publishers merging, and more...
Pardoning possession offenders is nice. Taking his boot off the necks of cannabis sellers would be even better.
Plus: The authoritarian convergence, inflation up and stocks down, and more...
The New York Times misleadingly claims that cases like the abortion sought by a 10-year-old Ohio rape victim "are not as rare as people think."
One of Ralph Petty's victims is trying to hold him accountable, but she will have to overcome prosecutorial immunity.
Her publisher will stop distributing her memoir Lucky, which detailed the attack and aftermath.
No accountability for government corruption.
Plus: Tennessee tries to micromanage media, Biden's ATF nominee worked Waco case, and more...
The women's liberation movement has gotten tied to mass incarceration. It needs to break free.
Plus: Homeland Security has detained thousands of pregnant women, Ginsburg wrong about "seamless" contraception coverage, and more...
Plus: Backlash to Amash's presidential run, new SCOTUS cases, and more...
Plus: Maybe Buttigieg didn't win Iowa? Vermont considers decriminalizing prostitution. Customs and Border Protection gets a status change. And more...
Those who reported sexual abuse were sent to a county jail, the suit alleges.
Plus: Free trade and free speech, a teen's death in detention, and more...
But with one huge exception—a massive spike in reported sexual assaults—the 2018 survey found only statistically insignificant increases.
A police procedural about rape cases that focuses on details without getting tedious
Hulu's Untouchable is a relentless accounting of the mogul's sexual misdeeds.
Forensic experts claim there is no way Larry Swearingen raped and killed Melissa Trotter. The state is still putting him to death.
An original movie about sexual trauma doesn't take the easy route.
Plus: Migrant children removed from detention centers, wine comes before the Supreme Court, a sci-fi writer imagines a world without Section 230, and more
The NYPD failed to update its crime-tracking system—and underreported rape by 38 percent.
Adam Lowther, a Navy veteran and nuclear deterrence expert, lost his job and spent $300,000 fighting the allegations.
Nonetheless, a judge will let a sex trafficking complaint against Weinstein proceed.
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