The Tony Timpa Wrongful Death Lawsuit Against Police Shows Why Jury Trials Are So Important
Trials are incredibly valuable fact-finding tools—particularly when the defendants are public employees.
Trials are incredibly valuable fact-finding tools—particularly when the defendants are public employees.
A new podcast asks whether federal agents are catching bad guys or creating them.
For five decades, drugs have been winning the war on drugs.
Among the indicted are a Southern Poverty Law Center attorney acting as a legal observer and three people who run a bail fund.
Alabamans have no right "to conspire with others in Alabama to try to have abortions performed out of state," argues Attorney General Steve Marshall.
Plus: FIRE fights college's vague "greater good" policy, Biden administration pushes double talk on tariffs, and more...
Legislators abuse the emergency label to push through spending that would otherwise violate budget constraints.
Plus: The Atlantic says anti-racists are overcorrecting, NYC targets landlords of unlicensed cannabis growers, and more...
Plus: The beauty of microschools, the futility of link taxes, and more...
Plus: New Zealand libertarianism, Barbie economics, and more...
The decision supports the notion that victims are entitled to recourse when the state retaliates against people for their words. But that recourse is still not guaranteed.
Plus: A warning about trigger warnings, Biden blocks uranium mining near Grand Canyon, and more...
The assault on Mount Carmel was meant to bolster the ATF's reputation. It failed.
Plus: More takes on the Trump indictment, Biden's new student loan plan is here, and more...
Larkin, 74, took his own life on Monday, just a little over a week before he was slated to stand trial for his role in running the web-classifieds platform Backpage.
Plus: More "manifesting prostitution" nonsense, U.S. loses top-tier credit rating, and more...
When a bystander offered to give the officers flotation devices and a small boat, they refused.
Plus: The right to call neighbor a "red-headed bitch," the case against a Digital Consumer Protection Commission, and more...
Plus: Abortion will be on the ballot in Ohio, CANSEE Act "would continue the erosion of financial privacy," and more...
Carlos Pena's livelihood has been crippled. It remains to be seen if he'll have any right to compensation.
New York politicians got out of the way for once, and something beautiful happened.
Police claimed Mack Nelson fell while resisting an officer. A video proved them wrong.
Horrible things are happening to vulnerable people, but we cannot help them by sending groups of vigilantes or law enforcement officers to hunt them.
A recently published statistical analysis of homicide rates in New York City finds strong support for the hypothesis that de-policing resulting from the George Floyd protests caused the 2020 homicide spikes.
Journalism is an activity shielded by the First Amendment, not a special class or profession.
Civil forfeiture is a highly unaccountable practice. The justices have the opportunity to make it a bit less so.
Plus: Government appeals social media order, Amsterdam attempts to move prostitution out of red-light district, and more...
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.
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