She Underpaid a Property Tax Bill. So the Government Seized Her Home, Sold It—and Kept the $102,636 Profit.
Chelsea Koetter is asking the Michigan Supreme Court to render the state's debt collection scheme unconstitutional.
Chelsea Koetter is asking the Michigan Supreme Court to render the state's debt collection scheme unconstitutional.
Candid end of term comments from one of the Court's progressive justices.
As lawmakers investigate what went wrong at the Pennsylvania Trump rally, they should resist calls to give the agency more money.
The New Right talks a big populist game, but their policies hurt the people they're supposed to help.
According to recently updated figures, more than half of the state's film production credits for 2021 went to just one film, whose two stars collectively earned over $50 million.
The presumptive Democratic nominee has a more liberal drug policy record than both the president and the Republican presidential nominee.
A majority of the judges concludes this fee constitutes a tax, the authority for which is improperly delegated.
The candidate supports gun rights, wants to privatize government programs, and would radically reduce the number of federal employees.
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The Kids Online Safety Act would have cataclysmic effects on free speech and privacy online.
The Office of Disciplinary Counsel comes for the "censorious" Judge Tim Grendell
Recent actions by the FTC show that its officers should review the Constitution.
How legislators learned to stop worrying about the constitutionality of federal drug and gun laws by abusing the Commerce Clause.
The agency claims DOI and DOC have "a high potential for abuse" because they resemble other drugs it has placed in Schedule I.
Robert Williams was arrested in 2020 after facial recognition software incorrectly identified him as the person responsible for a Detroit-area shoplifting incident.
Plus: Harris clinching nomination, Trump appealing N.Y. civil fraud judgment, and more...
Plus: A listener asks the editors if employers should be held responsible for the speech and actions of employees outside of the workplace.
Voters should not dismiss the former president's utter disregard for the truth as a personal quirk or standard political practice.
Gov. Janet Mills’s office referred critical social media posts to the police. The FPC pushed back.
After facing weeks of falling poll numbers and pressure from fellow Democrats and liberal donors, Biden ended his reelection campaign. He subsequently endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris.
Bureaucratic overreach is stirring up unnecessary trouble for Utah bartenders.
Collecting and analyzing newborns' blood could allow the state to surveil people for life.
The SAVE plan would have dramatically reduced the amount borrowers were required to pay back before receiving forgiveness—and cost taxpayers almost $500 billion over the next decade.
Reason's Zach Weissmueller talked with Trump supporters at the Republican National Convention about heated rhetoric, the weaponization of government, and plans for unity.
Under the law, the feds couldn't deny you a job or security clearance just because you've used marijuana in the past.
However distasteful, the First Amendment protects a citizen’s right to give a police officer the middle finger.
"In short, 'cruel and unusual' is not the same as 'harmful and unfair,'" the court wrote.
There seems to be general bipartisan agreement on keeping a majority of the cuts, which are set to expire. They can be financed by cleaning out the tax code of unfair breaks.
There’s less reason to fight when one-size-fits-all policies are replaced with local diversity.
A federal judge rejected the government’s excuses for banning home production of liquor.
Tuesday’s programming was light on policy and heavy on horror.
The decision agreed with Trump that Special Counsel Jack Smith was improperly appointed, which could have positive downstream effects for the rest of us, as well.
How legislators learned to stop worrying about the constitutionality of federal drug and gun laws by abusing the Commerce Clause
Competing visions on tipping policies highlight the differences in the candidates’ approaches to winning over working-class voters—but neither will provide much benefit.
New Mexico law requires quite a high standard for proving criminal negligence.
Although former President Donald Trump's deregulatory agenda would make some positive changes, it's simply not enough.
Activists and politicians look for almost any excuse to claim that judges should withdraw from cases. Their calls for recusal may be frivolous, but it gives them an opportunity to criticize judges they don't like.
While the decision is great news for Tennesseans, it's only the first step in reclaiming Americans' property rights against the open fields doctrine.
We need not conjure "extreme hypotheticals" to understand the danger posed by an "energetic executive" who feels free to flout the law.
Georgia parents were accused of child abuse after they took their daughter to the doctor. Does the state's story add up?
After police detained Benjamin Hendren, they urged construction workers to lie about him.
Which party can do the least to fix America's troubled old-age welfare system?