West Virginia Family Court Judge with History of Arranging Warrantless Searches Resigns
We may have finally discovered a limit to judicial immunity.
We may have finally discovered a limit to judicial immunity.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook on Thursday at 1 p.m. ET for a discussion of Tyre Nichols, police reform, and violent crime in America, featuring Walter Katz.
Plus: Democrats doubt Harris' ability to win, an end to pandemic emergency status, and more...
Plus: The editors consider the ongoing debt ceiling drama and answer a listener question about ending the war on drugs.
Report author: “The COVID-19 pandemic was a catastrophe for human freedom.”
The five police officers involved in the deadly encounter have been charged with Nichols' murder.
"They couldn't keep him alive for two weeks," says the boy's father. "That's absolutely insane."
Irvington made national headlines last year when it filed a lawsuit against an 82-year-old woman for filing too many public records requests. Now it says a lawyer for FIRE should be prosecuted.
For 25 years, the law has been giving states kickbacks when they finalize adoptions quickly.
A staggeringly high number of families are subject to child abuse and neglect investigations in Maricopa County, Arizona.
State actors are increasingly willing to seize children even with little evidence of child abuse.
"This is an extraordinarily disturbing finding" that "represents a catastrophic failure by the Federal government to respect basic human rights."
Too much government authority lends itself to swatting-style abuse.
Limiting the supply of a controlled substance does not remove demand. Users simply look elsewhere, including more unsavory sources.
Plus: Virginia lawmaker wants to criminalize parents who don't affirm child's gender identity, inflation is up 8.2 percent over the past 12 months, and more...
"This is inhumane," one child told state inspectors.
The police admitted wrongdoing, but Denver moved forward with a plan to reduce crowds and crimes downtown—by targeting food trucks that did nothing wrong.
Multiple state agencies told Sheriff Randy ‘Country’ Seal that he had no right to collect taxes from a rancher in his parish. He sued anyway.
Hundreds of lives were upended by the University of Farmington, a fake university that took $6 million in tuition and fees from foreign students.
So why do Democrats keep equivocating on the point that households making under $400,000 may be targeted for more audits by an expanded IRS?
Doing so would be blatantly unconstitutional.
Just a week ago, New York City convinced a federal judge not to seize control of the jail.
Plus: International Whores' Day, U.S. Postal Service sued over the seizure of Black Lives Matter masks, and more...
A plaintiff in the class-action lawsuit says he had to declare bankruptcy after Chicago dumped $20,000 of ticket debts on him.
More than 25 million people remain locked down in Shanghai, with Guangzhou—a city of 18 million—looking primed to follow.
As officials forcibly separate parents from their COVID-positive children, criticism of the CCP mounts.
Irvington Township says it's being bullied by 82-year-old Elouise McDaniel and is asking a court to block her from filing public records requests.
2.5 million dead bees, and an unlikely test of public health powers.
Police seized more than $100,000 in cash from a 25-year-old Chicago woman for not correctly describing what her suitcase looked like.
"My servers are not lesser people," said owner Eric Flannery. "They don't need to be masked. They don't carry disease."
Last year may have been the year of the Cuomosexual, but 2021 rightly disabused people of the notion that New York's governor had their best interests at heart.
And some state politicians are talking about asset forfeiture reform.
A police dog's alert prompted the search, and the money was seized via civil asset forfeiture.
Regulators insist Fourth Amendment protections don’t apply to administrative searches.
A surveillance case will determine whether officials can be sued for "national security" rights violations.
Dispatching a state trooper to a hospital seems a bit excessive.
Too often, the government punishes citizens who reveal the state's true behavior to their fellow Americans.
Fleeing isn't enough to keep dissenters safe from tyranny.
The pop star's moving testimony casts light on the potential for abuse in court-ordered conservatorships.
He should've focused on containing nursing home COVID spread, not getting VIP treatment for penthouse-dwelling Manhattanites (and his own family members).
The HHS inspector general says the department misreported over $500 million in administrative spending.
Plus: Supreme Court considers church reopenings, GOP proposes back-to-work bonuses, Libertarian Party picks 2020 ticket, and more...
Brian Kolb was arrested on New Year's Eve for driving under the influence.
Working through the lows and highs of the House impeachment inquiry on the Reason Roundtable podcast
They're the latest to plead guilty in the Mississippi Department of Corrections bribing scheme.
If governments can oppress, they usually will.
Florida man may lose home because he didn’t cut his grass.
It's become nothing but a weapon fought over by people who want to smash each other—and you.
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