Georgia A.G. Drops Frivolous Money Laundering Charges Against Cop City Bail Fund
The three defendants remain under indictment for racketeering, along with 58 others.
The three defendants remain under indictment for racketeering, along with 58 others.
Diddy’s indictment turns the typical sex trafficking charge on its head.
The recordings demonstrate yet again that drug warriors always knew marijuana wasn't that bad—they just didn't care.
Three people have pled guilty and two will go to trial over the actor's death.
This flies in the face of one popular narrative.
"A couple million times a year, people use guns defensively," says economist and author John Lott.
Harold Medina made that argument during an internal investigation of a car crash he caused last February.
We can't stop technological advancement, but we should limit government misuse of it.
It's an insane ask for someone convicted of just one nonviolent offense.
The government needs a warrant to spy on you. So agencies are paying tech companies to do it instead.
Many circuit courts have said that law enforcement can hold your property for as long as they want. D.C.’s high court decided last week that’s unconstitutional.
If you want something done right, do it yourself. That includes protecting family, friends, and neighbors.
Texas has set an October 17 execution date for Robert Roberson, convicted in 2003 of murdering his 2-year-old daughter.
"The conversations are overwhelmingly productive and positive," says a representative from Decriminalize Sex Work.
A lawyer who should know better wants to ignore the history of snooping cops to fight guns and crime.
South Carolina's Operation Rolling Thunder targets cash and contraband but harasses guilty and innocent travelers alike.
Thus far, the courts have barred Curtrina Martin from asking a jury for damages. She is appealing to the Supreme Court.
An uneven playing field allows the aggressive tactics and legal loopholes that turn traffic stops into cash grabs.
Routine searches of commercial buses violate privacy, target low-income passengers, and result in widespread violations.
No arrest necessary as South Carolina police hunt for cash
Warrantless surveillance, Comic Con "sex trafficking," and the persistence of trafficking myths
A 21-month legal battle unveils the dark side of South Carolina's annual traffic crackdown.
The Supreme Court created, then gutted, a right to sue federal agents for civil rights violations.
Robert Williams was arrested in 2020 after facial recognition software incorrectly identified him as the person responsible for a Detroit-area shoplifting incident.
While there was some political grandstanding among members of Congress, the bipartisan demand for answers was refreshing.
However distasteful, the First Amendment protects a citizen’s right to give a police officer the middle finger.
The cases of Joey the Player and the Long Island Serial Killer show how systemic neglect and the failure to pass an immunity bill have left violent criminals on the loose for far too long.
Most officer retirements happened in 2021, and there is no evidence showing cities with more intense protests saw a greater number of officer exits.
The original version was overly punitive.
A federal appeals court ruled that the government is not immune from a breach-of-contract lawsuit filed by foreign students duped into enrolling into a fake school run by ICE.
The doctrine makes it nearly impossible for victims of prosecutorial misconduct to get recourse.
The surveillance company mSpy just suffered its third data breach in a decade, exposing government officials snooping for both official and unofficial reasons.
And a grand jury says that's illegal.
Vague rules and an unjustified raid led to Bryan Malinowski’s brutal death at the hands of federal agents.
The plaintiffs are challenging the state's widespread surveillance, which it collects through over 600 cameras.
While the data is far from perfect, if the overall trend holds, violent crime could be back to pre-COVID levels by the end of the year.
A WIRED investigation reveals the extent to which residents of Chula Vista are subjected to surveillance from the sky.
Law enforcement could arrest those they suspect of crossing into the state illegally—and they’d be “immune from liability for damages.”
Even in an era of police militarization, there’s something shocking about seeing cops in riot gear on college campuses.
While drones are less likely to shoot or maim innocent civilians, they could also pose privacy issues.
Justin Pulliam's arrest and lawsuit once again demand we ask if "real" journalists are entitled to a different set of rights.