Lawsuits Keep Rolling Back Unconstitutional Vegan 'Meat' Bans
No one is confused about whether Tofurky is turkey.
No one is confused about whether Tofurky is turkey.
It’s a little thing, but thousands of people end up in jail over these types of avoidable technical violations.
Priscilla Villarreal found herself in a jail cell for publishing two routine stories. A federal court still can't decide what to do about that.
In the two cases, brought against Harvard and the University of North Carolina, anti-affirmative action group Students for Fair Admissions argues that race-conscious admissions violate the Civil Rights Act
A highway engineer got qualified immunity for detaining drivers—despite not being a cop.
Convincing evidence of his innocence has been available for years. But the criminal legal system prioritizes procedure and bureaucracy over liberty.
The Supreme Court may soon consider if acquitted conduct sentencing is illegal.
Alvin Bragg campaigned on Tracy McCarter’s innocence. Once in office, that was apparently less politically expedient.
Gun control advocates may embrace the 10th Amendment.
Former Judges Mark A. Ciavarella and Michael T. Conahan are now serving lengthy prison sentences for what became known as the "kids-for-cash" scandal.
The case shows the power given to judges when parental consent or notification is required for a minor's abortion.
Plus: Americans want to vote on abortion, why the housing crisis has gone national, and more...
The Delaware DMV recalled Kari Overington’s plate over “perceived profanity.” Now the ACLU is helping her take on the state.
Michael Picard's free speech rights were violated when he was booked for telling passersby to "Google Jury Nullification."
Plus: Video game play time doesn't affect well-being, crypto groups applaud the Virtual Currency Tax Fairness Act, and more...
Adding progressive justices to the bench would eventually backfire.
A federal badge will now serve as an impenetrable shield against civil liability.
Plus: Coverage of Section 230 is overwhelmingly negative, Arizona cops who watched a man drown have been placed on leave, and more...
Insects aren't a category protected by the California Endangered Species Act. So state officials classified four bumblebee species as fish to get them listed.
Plus: Libertarian Party changes abortion and bigotry planks, the FDA's weird rejection of fluvoxamine for treating COVID-19, and more...
Jerry Rogers Jr. complained that police hadn't solved a murder yet—and found himself in a jail cell.
Plus: School voucher program survives lawsuit, Biden invokes Defense Production Act for formula, and more...
A conservative judge expressed skepticism at the panel's conclusion before issuing a strong rebuke of prosecutorial immunity.
Anthony Novak's arrest and subsequent lawsuit set up a debate around overcriminalization and free speech.
Adults declared "incapacitated" by the courts can lose everything—their homes, their savings, their freedom—to Florida's sprawling guardianship system.
A recent court decision has reinvigorated the debate around just how specific the accused has to be in asking to speak with an attorney.
The state claimed she beat a 2-year-old to death. But evidence may show it was the result of a fall down stairs.
A judge's blistering dissent is a reminder that this issue does not have to be a partisan one.
One of Ralph Petty's victims is trying to hold him accountable, but she will have to overcome prosecutorial immunity.
The ordeal highlights how collective bargaining in the public sphere has stacked almost every factor against alleged victims of police misconduct.
The previous standard barring such lawsuits made “little sense," wrote Justice Brett Kavanaugh for the majority.
Breyer led the charge against the court packers, denouncing them as shortsighted ideologues who threatened both judicial independence and bedrock liberal values.
Terry Abbott couldn't afford representation, because the state took the cash he'd use to pay for it.
The police officers who allegedly framed William Virgil were denied qualified immunity. But they're still trying to delay a trial.
Advanced statistics and redistricting reformers combined to kill one of the country's worst gerrymanders.
There are no public health gains from booting kids out of the country.
"This is very bad for property rights."
The punishment is a bit rich considering the government's own mishandling of pandemic cash.
"It's completely changed my belief in fairness," says Amy Sterner Nelson.
Shelby County District Attorney Amy Weirich said Moses would be a free woman—if she hadn't insisted on exercising her constitutional right to trial.
Louisiana refused to release Sneed for months, despite a judge ruling several times that the state was breaking the law.
It is almost impossible to hold a rogue federal officer accountable. The Supreme Court may make it even harder.
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