In French Thriller Anatomy of a Fall, the Law Is No One's Friend
A tricky, excellent legal drama shows just how hard it can be to pin down the truth.
A tricky, excellent legal drama shows just how hard it can be to pin down the truth.
Plus: Greta Thunberg gets booted from Israeli schools, Spain gets even less serious about work, regulating skyline views, and more...
Douglass Mackey's case raised questions about free speech, overcriminalization, and a politicized criminal legal system.
Even content creators outside of New York would feel its effects.
The Michigan Supreme Court will hear opening arguments today in a case that could decide whether the practice is allowed.
Tayvin Galanakis was arrested last year on suspicion of intoxication, even after a Breathalyzer showed he was sober.
An officer conducted the search of Prentiss Jackson's vehicle after claiming he could smell "a little bit of weed." It ultimately resulted in a lengthy prison term.
The trial—and, in some sense, Timpa's life—was about transparency.
The judge ruled that the law was unconstitutionally overbroad, vague, and viewpoint discrimination.
The judge ruled that drag performances are not inherently expressive and that schools could regulate "vulgar and lewd" conduct.
Trials are incredibly valuable fact-finding tools—particularly when the defendants are public employees.
Tony Timpa's story shows how far the government goes to prevent victims of abuse from seeking recourse.
Kaia Rolle's ordeal led Florida to raise its minimum age of arrest to 7 years old, but her family and activists say that's not nearly high enough.
"Supreme Court justice who had a famous friendship with RBG"
St. Paul police officer Heather Weyker has thus far managed to get immunity for upending Hamdi Mohamud's life.
Plus: New York City's crackdown on short-term rentals, Brazil's UFO investigations, and more...
Plus: A listener question concerning porn verification laws.
Civil libertarians should decry the tendency to round everything up to terrorism.
A Texas judge ordered that the airline submit to training on the rights of religious believers after losing a religious discrimination lawsuit.
Plus: FIRE fights college's vague "greater good" policy, Biden administration pushes double talk on tariffs, and more...
While chalking on D.C. sidewalks and streets is illegal, the protesters say they were targeted for their beliefs.
The guidelines would ignore decades of academic findings about how firm concentration can have a positive impact on consumers' welfare.
Trump and his acolytes' conduct was indefensible, but the state's RICO law is overly broad and makes it too easy for prosecutors to bring charges.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook on Thursday at 1:30 p.m. Eastern for a live discussion with Jay Bhattacharya and John Vecchione about their legal case against the Biden administration.
End the government’s plea-bargaining racket with open and adversarial jury trials.
When it comes to conflicts with people engaged in unpopular or disfavored speech, too many journalists side with the feds.
For now, doctors who end pregnancies when a woman’s life is at risk can still be prosecuted.
When a bystander offered to give the officers flotation devices and a small boat, they refused.
Plus: A listener question concerning drug decriminalization and social well-being
Carlos Pena's livelihood has been crippled. It remains to be seen if he'll have any right to compensation.
A federal judge objected to two aspects of the agreement that seemed designed to shield Biden from the possibility that his father will lose reelection next year.
The furious response to a seemingly modest reform reflects a broader dispute about the role of courts in a democracy.
Both the state attorney general and the state legislature declined to defend the law in court after the ACLU of Arizona and news media organizations sued to overturn it.
Plus: GOP candidate defends “limited role of government” in parental decisions for transgender kids, some common sense about Diet Coke and cancer, and more…
A federal judge says the ATF can’t arbitrarily classify inert objects as gun parts.
A supposedly sacred duty devolves into much ado about ordering lunch.
Civil forfeiture is a highly unaccountable practice. The justices have the opportunity to make it a bit less so.
The appeals court judge argued that the Israeli Supreme Court had usurped the role of legislators.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a live discussion of the Court's recent rulings on affirmative action and same-sex wedding services.
At a recent congressional hearing, Republicans and Democrats sparred over clemency. But they share more common ground than they'd like to admit.
Now both a violent and nonviolent felon have been found by lower courts to have a Second Amendment right to own weapons. The Supreme Court will likely consider the issue in the near future.
Plus: Maine prostitution measure becomes law, "significant misconduct" in jail where Epstein hung himself, Mike Pence defends free markets, and more...
The ruling is the latest in a series of legal defeats for anti-drag laws.
Massachusetts reformed its notoriously bad public records laws in 2020, but reporters are still fighting to get the police misconduct files they're legally entitled to.
The ruling is likely the first by a state supreme court to undercut the popular forensic technique.
The guilty verdict came the same day the Justice Department blasted Minneapolis for harassing the press.
The government appears to agree that Charles Foehner shot a man in self-defense. He may spend decades behind bars anyway.
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