David Clarke's Awful Book Explains Why He Should Be Nowhere Near Power
Much like the jail he ran, former sheriff David Clarke's new book is cruel and unusual punishment.
Much like the jail he ran, former sheriff David Clarke's new book is cruel and unusual punishment.
How many people will die for Donald Trump's mistaken belief that only "political correctness" is holding America back from victory?
The Supreme Court will arguments in Carpenter v. U.S. in the coming term.
Prostitution and porn during the 1970s focus of new series.
U.S. policymakers continue to pursue programs that punish at the expense of ones that save lives.
A Deadpool screening yields an undercover op from Utah's Bureau of Investigation-and a smackdown in federal court for policing speech.
As greens rush to blame Harvey's devastation on global warming, the real culprit - subsidizing coastal development - goes unmentioned.
The Supreme Court decision forbidding unwarranted blood collection is a year old.
"Juggalos are being fucked with, so we have to do something about it."
FDA honcho Scott Gottlieb caves on Obama's menu labeling regulations.
"Project labor agreements" requiring union contracts on most government work are spreading in California.
Noomi Rapace and Orlando Bloom going through the old Euro-espionage motions.
Remember the time someone died of thirst inside David Clarke's jail?
There are no downsides, say proponents.
Matt Welch talks Berkeley's quaking in front of Antifa, and Jacob Siegel explains who the original demonstrators the other week actually were
The state will continue to pursue money-laundering charges against Carl Ferrer, Michael Lacey, and James Larkin.
Federal officials deny big reductions in adolescent tobacco use and obscure the harm-reducing potential of e-cigarettes.
Libertarians should reject right-wing populism in all its forms.
But talks, even bilateral ones, offer the best solutions.
State cannot force local police to serve as immigration agents and detain people for the feds.
People seeking to flourish should have the freedom to enhance their bodies and minds
Miami-Dade County spent more than $9 million over the past three years so county workers could do 300,000 hours of work for the benefit of public sector unions.
The treasury secretary has managed to put off debt ceiling calamity, but otherwise failed to embraced needed spending reforms.
Hope Zeferjohn's role was limited to chatting with the "victim"-who was never actually trafficked-on Facebook.
The ruling shows how carelessly the paper peddled nonsense about Republican rhetoric and mass murder.
Some would rather have overdoses than risk "destigmatizing" addiction.
Past programs have blown budgets and funneled money to well-off students
Premiums are on the rise and competition remains weak in much of the country.
Presidential pardons were a depressing crapshoot long before Arpaio received one.
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