After 50 Years, the DEA Is Still Losing the War on Drugs
For five decades, the agency has destroyed countless lives while targeting Americans for personal choices and peaceful transactions.
For five decades, the agency has destroyed countless lives while targeting Americans for personal choices and peaceful transactions.
The lawsuit claims the ban has no "legitimate penological justification"
The National Association of Medical Examiners now says "excited delirium" should not be cited as a cause of death.
A Republican-sponsored resolution would authorize the president to "use all necessary and appropriate force" against foreigners involved in fentanyl trafficking.
Massachusetts reformed its notoriously bad public records laws in 2020, but reporters are still fighting to get the police misconduct files they're legally entitled to.
Plus: Texas’ new anti-porn law, Biden meets with A.I. critics, and more...
The guilty verdict came the same day the Justice Department blasted Minneapolis for harassing the press.
Plus: Americans may be getting more socially conservative, poverty policy beyond welfare, and more...
Snooping through emails, video, and photos isn’t the same as stumbling on containers full of cocaine.
Her arrest may have been retaliation for her involvement in a lawsuit against the local police department.
Joanna Schwartz on how law enforcement "became untouchable"
Plus: A rundown of recent nonsensical proposals for constitutional amendments
Prosecutors also want a judge to take basically all possible defenses off the table.
Plus: FIRE investigates "woke" Florida professor's dismissal, inequality index finds progress across multiple dimensions, and more...
Plus: Court rules that naked female spa can't exclude transgender women, Biden vetoes bill blocking student loan forgiveness, and more...
Plus: Michigan Supreme Court takes up case on warrantless drone spying, Obamacare legal battles continue, and more...
The state court of appeals held previously that unconstitutionally collected evidence could still be used for civil enforcement.
Plus: Flaws in studies linking teen social media use to depression, debt ceiling deal passes Senate, and more...
Eric Parsa died after police placed him in a "prone position" for over nine minutes. Now, the DOJ says that the officers' actions likely violated the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Brianna Grier was having a mental health crisis. She needed an ambulance. She got two cops instead.
Plus: Governments are complying more with constitutions, the Supreme Court comes to a commonsense conclusion about EPA authority, and more...
Asset forfeiture isn't funny—but what if it involves tripping bunnies and psychedelic mushrooms?
Join Reason on YouTube Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern with Eli Lake to discuss what the Durham report tells us about the FBI, the media and U.S. politics.
Plus: Louisiana bill would ban teachers from talking about sexual orientation or gender identity, TikTok is suing Montana, and more...
The FBI's sloppy, secret search warrants should be a concern for all Americans.
A demand letter states that the Uvalde school district is infringing on Adam Martinez's First Amendment right to criticize the government.
Retire the paw patrol.
Just about everybody agrees the practice is legalized theft, but cops and prosecutors oppose change.
Thanks to the city's Initiative 71, Lit City Smoke Shop is part of D.C.'s thriving weed-gifting industry.
The loss of public key encryption service providers would make us all more vulnerable, both physically and financially.
Just days after the release of an autopsy showing an activist may not have fired on officers before being shot to death, police arrested activists for putting flyers on mailboxes.
Enjoy a special video episode recorded live from New York City’s illustrious Comedy Cellar at the Village Underground.
Plus: The "Kids Online Safety Act" is back and as bad as ever, expect another interest rate hike today, and more…
The article explains why libertarians should focus much more on constitutional issues arising from zoning, immigration restrictions and racial profiling.
The Department of Justice emulates the Kremlin in smearing government critics as foreign agents.
The trend is driven by a huge drop in prosecutions in Arizona, the U.S. Sentencing Commission reports.
Robert Delgado's family is now seeking damages.
As former Backpage execs await their August trial, the shutdown is still worsening the lives it was supposed to improve.
Plus: Los Angeles sues journalist who published police photos, IRS releases $80 billion budget plan, and more...
"KCPD has continuously and repeatedly advised Plaintiff and his fellow officers that if they did not fulfill a 'ticket quota' then they would be kicked out of the unit," the complaint states.
Lakeith Smith's case epitomizes the issues with the "felony murder" doctrine.
A 9-year-old backed out of a deal to sell her pet goat for slaughter. Local officials and sheriff's deputies used the power of the state to force her to go through with it.
Plus: Evidence that social media causes teen health problems "isn't convincing," more states ban gender transition treatments for minors, and more...
As the government sets its sights on migrants crossing the border, native-born Americans have also come under its watchful eye.
One officer was fired and another was placed on restricted duty this week, but there are still a lot of unanswered questions.
Seven sheriff's deputies say the rapper subjected them to "embarrassment, ridicule, emotional distress, humiliation, and loss of reputation" after a drug bust on his house came up empty.