Cops Who Arrested Man Over Fake Facebook Page Get Qualified Immunity
Anthony Novak's arrest and subsequent lawsuit set up a debate around overcriminalization and free speech.
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.
Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin's support for qualified immunity is in opposition to the principles he says he stands for.
Ohio's supposed reforms left lawmakers in charge of the mapmaking process, and a gerrymandered map was the predictable result.
In an August ruling, Washington's Supreme Court found that a homeless plaintiff's truck qualified as his homestead.
Without judicial review, liberals confronting a Republican-controlled legislature will have no opportunity to seek constitutional redress in federal court.
Kelli Goode's civil suit is a case study in how difficult it can be to get state actors to take responsibility when they allegedly infringe on someone's rights.
It was the city that put the footage in the public record in the first place.
The officers originally received qualified immunity, meaning Timpa's estate had no right to state their case before a jury.
Colorado First Judicial District Attorney Alexis King said she pursued the punishment after Aguilera-Mederos insisted on his right to trial.
Rogel Aguilera-Mederos is set to die in prison, thanks to Colorado's mandatory sentencing laws.
Bobby Sneed's story highlights how far some government agents will go to keep people locked up, flouting the same legal standards they are charged with upholding.
Regulators insist Fourth Amendment protections don’t apply to administrative searches.
The felony murder rule is a perversion of justice—even when used against unsympathetic defendants.
Florida passed a law to stop big tech “censorship.” But the law itself tramples First Amendment rights.
Coercive plea deals trample on defendants' Sixth Amendment rights.
It’s difficult to avoid the suspicion that the powers-that-be habitually lie about their conduct.
Plus: Biden administration defends vaccine mandate, Bari Weiss announces the University of Austin, and more...
"Outside activities that may pose a conflict of interest to the executive branch of the State of Florida create a conflict for the University of Florida," said the university in a statement.
"This is not just an obvious constitutional infringement—it's hard to imagine a more textbook violation of the First Amendment."
The Pennsbury School Board is not only chilling speech, but also editing out community members’ critiques of the school board from YouTube videos of their meetings.
Is a required content warning or algorithm change a violation of the First Amendment?
In two opinions issued Monday, the Court gave qualified immunity to several police officers accused of violating the Constitution.
It was unconstitutional to charge Jenna Holm with manslaughter. But the state wanted to protect its own.
"It gives cities a protection that ordinary citizens never have."
"Do you really want to live in a country where government bureaucrats, based on whim and personal preference, can censor whatever they don't like?"
Qualified immunity "does not protect an officer who inflicts deadly force on a person who is only a threat to himself."
The legal doctrine continues to render juries irrelevant.