Nobody Should Be Placed in Solitary Confinement—Not Even Paul Manafort
Paul Manafort isn’t deserving of torture. Neither was Kalief Browder.
Paul Manafort isn’t deserving of torture. Neither was Kalief Browder.
Alabama is one of the least transparent states in the U.S. when it comes to civil asset forfeiture. That could be changing.
The most hilarious overpolicing story you'll hear this week, on the latest Fifth Column podcast
Texas law lets police hide records of suspects who die in custody from grieving families. It could have been fixed, but a police union torpedoed the reform bill.
The NYPD failed to update its crime-tracking system—and underreported rape by 38 percent.
The researchers found no statistically significant relationship between testing positive for THC and contributing to accidents.
The jail, which saw several deaths, was overseen by former Sheriff David Clarke at the time.
New York legislators also are taking another shot at legalization.
State lawmakers reached across the aisle for a bipartisan push against capital punishment.
A finding of guilt would be an attack on the autonomy and self-ownership of all young people
The Trump appointee warns that "little would be left of our First Amendment liberties" if cops could punish people who irk them by finding a legal reason to bust them.
The treatment of Bryan Carmody and Julian Assange reveals widespread confusion about who counts as a journalist and whether it matters.
The chief and the union square off over who arranged what was likely an illegal search.
The new law rests on unsupported premises and vague language to penalize a victimless crime.
Child services called because Holly Curry let her kids wait in the car while she bought a muffin.
If only you could use parentheses in English the way you can in math or computer programming.
Words of wisdom from the Utah Supreme Court.
Litigation financing, campaign financing, and salmagundi.
The legislation moves forward following a compromise with law enforcement groups.
Don't believe the Justice Department when it reassures journalists that the WikiLeaks founder is uniquely guilty of violating the Espionage Act.
Plus: Naomi Wolf has no clue (again), gun site wins Section 230 case, and more...
This is the nature of government. It can't stop the flow of illicit substances in a sealed and militarized building that's under its total control.
The court upheld a $1000 fine imposed by state law on Presidential electors who refused to vote as the voters instructed.
The bipartisan push to remove capital punishment from state law is moving forward.
What happens when cities and counties have their own ideas about a law that authorizes the seizure of guns from people who are mentally ill?
The operation used its intimate knowledge of NYPD operations to thrive.
Jon Goldsmith called a local deputy a "stupid sum bitch" on Facebook, so the deputy's superior charged Goldsmith with writing a threatening statement.
Or are Americans simply wising up to the dangers posed by cops having their "face prints" on file?
A study shows that when these fees hit low-income offenders, they wreck their lives—and also don't even get paid.
The bill allows dual prosecutions of people in the president's orbit who receive pardons or commutations.
While well-intentioned, the alert system is often ineffective.
I discuss with Nadine Strossen and Jacob Mchangama what the Internet has come to
Matthew Bowen hit a man who crossed the border. Then he sent a text calling him a "human pit maneuver."
Emanuel was a habitual violator of Illinois' public records laws and shielded the police from public scrutiny whenever he could.
The restriction was unconstitutionally content-based, the Eighth Circuit held, because it has an exception for flags "containing distinctive colors, patterns or symbols used as a symbol of a government or institution."
A debate over recognizing a pro-Israel student group reveals ignorance and antisemitism among Williams' students
The oft-abused tool is used more to raise revenue than to protect public safety.
Trumps two High Court nominees are jurisprudentially independent of one another.
Thoughts on a debate that will be held at the ALI Annual Meeting.
Episode 263 of the Cyberlaw Podcast
Drug traffickers' idol, a voice from the grave, and all decent people.
Kelling later disavowed the high-volume arrest programs that police departments justified using his theory.